A former Vice President and Publisher
of two imprints at Random House\, \;Shaye \;Areheart has over 30
years in the publishing industry in New York City\, where she started he
r career as the assistant to novelist and poet\, James Dickey. \;
Shaye \;currently directs the Columbia University
Publishing Course\, which has – for more than 60 years – been traini
ng young men and women for careers as editors\, literary agents\, publish
ers\, designers\, publicists and more. Graduates can be found in every ki
nd of job\, at major magazines and publishing houses across the nation.
div>
UID:20140917T000000Z-29079@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140908T100656Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/29079-director-shaye-areheart-
to-discuss-the-columbia
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140912T205031Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/48610_shaye_areheart.rev.1409244930.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:29079
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/48610_shaye_areheart.rev.1409244930.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:
\n The English department is delighted to welco
me former Vice President and Publisher of two imprints at Random House\,&
#160\;Shaye \;Areheart for a second evening to discuss the Columbia U
niversity Publishing Course\, which she currently directs. \; The Co
lumbia University Publishing Course has – for more than 60 years – be
en training young men and women for careers as editors\, literary agents\
, publishers\, designers\, publicists and more. Graduates can be found in
every kind of job\, at major magazines and publishing houses across the
nation.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140929T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140929T200000
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575
SUMMARY:An Evening with Poet Marilyn Chin
UID:20140930T020000Z-29186@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140908T102400Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/28833
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140923T164223Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/48812_marilyn_chin.rev.1410197160.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:29186
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/48812_marilyn_chin.rev.1410197160.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us for a special evening with poet Marily
n Chin! This event is co-sponsored by Lewis &\; Clark College's Depart
ment of Inclusion and Multicultural Engagement and the English Department
. It is free and open to the public.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141023T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141023T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Alexis Smith
DESCRIPTION:Alexis Margaret Smith grew up in Soldotna\, Alaska\, and Seat
tle\, Washington. She attended Mount Holyoke College\, Portland State Uni
versity\, and Goddard College\, where she earned an MFA in Creative Writi
ng. Her first novel\, Glaciers\, was published by Tin House Books. \;
Her second novel\, Islands\, is forthcoming from Houghton Mifflin. \
; Refreshments will be provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Alexis Margaret Smith grew up in Soldot
na\, Alaska\, and Seattle\, Washington. She attended Mount Holyoke Colleg
e\, Portland State University\, and Goddard College\, where she earned an
MFA in Creative Writing. Her first novel\, Glaciers\, was publi
shed by Tin House Books. \; Her second novel\, Islands\, is
forthcoming from Houghton Mifflin. \; Refreshments will be provided.<
/p>
UID:20141024T003000Z-29191@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140908T110829Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/29191-a-fiction-reading-by-ale
xis-smith
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20141014T200042Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/48820_alexis_smith.rev.1410199683.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:29191
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/48820_alexis_smith.rev.1410199683.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The English department is delighted to welcome author
Alexis Smith. \; Her first novel\, Glaciers\, was published
by Tin House Books. \; Her second novel\, Islands\, is fort
hcoming from Houghton Mifflin.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141030T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141030T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Henry Carlile
DESCRIPTION:Poet Henry Carlile was born in San Francisco and grew up in C
alifornia and Washington State. He is a \;lifelong \;outdoorsman
and conservationist whose poems reflect the natural world. His latest boo
k\, Oregon\, was published by Carnegie Mellon University Press in 2013.
Carlile earned an MA with emphasis in creative writing from the Univers
ity of Washington\, where he studied with Theodore Roethke\, Henry Reed\,
Elizabeth Bishop and David Wagoner. He taught creative writing and Ameri
can literature at Portland State University and was a visiting lecturer i
n the Iowa Writers Workshop. Carlile has received grants from the Nation
al Endowment for the Arts\, the Oregon Arts Commission and the Ingram Mer
rill Foundation. His work has appeared in Poetry\, American Poetry Review
\, the New Yorker\, Shenandoah and many other publications. He lives with
his wife and family in Portland\, Oregon.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Poet Henry Carlile was born in San Fran
cisco and grew up in California and Washington State. He is a \;lifel
ong \;outdoorsman and conservationist whose poems reflect the natural
world. His latest book\, Oregon\, was published by Carnegie Mel
lon University Press in 2013.
Carlile earned an MA with emphasi
s in creative writing from the University of Washington\, where he studie
d with Theodore Roethke\, Henry Reed\, Elizabeth Bishop and David Wagoner
. He taught creative writing and American literature at Portland State Un
iversity and was a visiting lecturer in the Iowa Writers Workshop.
Carlile has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts\,
the Oregon Arts Commission and the Ingram Merrill Foundation. His work ha
s appeared in Poetry\, American Poetry Review\, the New Yorker\, Shenando
ah and many other publications. He lives with his wife and family in Port
land\, Oregon.
UID:20141031T010000Z-29190@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140908T105727Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/29190-a-poetry-reading-by-henr
y-carlile
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20141028T175852Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/48818_henry_carlile.rev.1410198875.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:29190
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/48818_henry_carlile.rev.1410198875.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for an evening of
poetry with Henry Carlile\, who will read from his most recent publicatio
n\,
Oregon. \; Refreshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141105T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141105T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Fiction Reading by Peyton Marshall
DESCRIPTION:Peyton Marshall is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop.
\;Her work has appeared in \;The New York Times\, \;Tin Hous
e\, A Public Space\, \;Etiquetta Negra\, Blackbird\, \;Five Chapt
ers\, \;and \;Best New American Voices. \;Goodhouse\, \;ï
»¿her debut novel\, has already been picked as a top ten book for the fal
l by the New York Observer. As Booklist comments\, "Goodhouse is ri
chly imagined and builds to a satisfyingly suspenseful conclusion". \
; \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Peyton Marshall is a graduate of the Io
wa Writers' Workshop. \;Her work has appeared in \;The New Y
ork Times\, \;Tin House\, A Public Space\, \;Etiquetta N
egra\, Blackbird\, \;Five Chapters\, \;and \;Best New American Voices. \;
Goodhouse\, \;
her debut novel\, has already been picked as a top ten book for the fa
ll by the New York Observer. As Booklist comments\, "Goodhouse is richly imagined and builds to a satisfyingly suspenseful conclusi
on". \;
\;
UID:20141106T013000Z-30307@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140923T104015Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30307-fiction-reading-by-peyto
n-marshall
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20141027T183727Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/49166_peyton_marshall.rev.1411492954.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30307
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/49166_peyton_marshall.rev.1411492954.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English Department for an evening wit
h fiction writer Peyton Marshall. \;Her work has appeared in \;
The New York Times\, \;Tin House\, \;and A
60\;Public Space \;among others\, as well as the recent release
of her debut novel\, \;Goodhouse.
\nRefreshments will b
e provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|reading|send-to-u
ndergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141119T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141119T180000
LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 102
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:The Letters of Ralph Ellison: "Who Knows But That On the Lower Fr
equencies I Speak For [Me]?"
DESCRIPTION:Ralph Ellison's letters are fascinating. \; \; Writte
n over 60 years from his college days at Tuskegee in 1933 to shortly 
\; before his death in April 1994\, the letters\, directly and indirectly
\, provide rich commentary on American society as it evolved from a Jim C
row\, still largely rural society to an urban digital America where integ
ration had long since become the law of the land\, if not its reality.
60\; Ellison's letters are a complex portrait of his development as a man
who insisted that his identity was indelibly black (Negro was his word o
f choice into the 1980s) and American. \; Many of his letters also of
fer some of his most candid\, incisive comments about what he was strivin
g for in his fiction\, both the classic\, Invisible Man\, and the immense
second novel he left unfinished at his death. \; Professor John C
allahan will discuss how Ellison's letters\, when published in 2016\, wil
l become an indispensable autobiographical source for new interpretations
of his essays and fiction as well as for understanding the America he li
ved in and helped shape. \; The letters will be the centerpiece of th
e ENG 333-2 Major Figures course Callahan is teaching this coming spring.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Ralph Ellison's letters are fascinating
. \; \; Written over 60 years from his college days at Tuskegee i
n 1933 to shortly \; before his death in April 1994\, the letters\, d
irectly and indirectly\, provide rich commentary on American society as i
t evolved from a Jim Crow\, still largely rural society to an urban digit
al America where integration had long since become the law of th
e land\, if not its reality. \; Ellison's letters are a complex portr
ait of his development as a man who insisted that his identity was indeli
bly black (Negro was his word of choice into the 1980s) and American.
0\; Many of his letters also offer some of his most candid\, incisive com
ments about what he was striving for in his fiction\, both the classic\,
Invisible Man\, and the immense second novel he left unfinished
at his death.
\;
Professor John Callahan will discus
s how Ellison's letters\, when published in 2016\, will become an indispe
nsable autobiographical source for new interpretations of his essays and
fiction as well as for understanding the America he lived in and helped s
hape. \; The letters will be the centerpiece of the ENG 333-2 Major F
igures course Callahan is teaching this coming spring.
UID:20141120T010000Z-31409@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20141031T101100Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/31409-the-letters-of-ralph-ell
ison-who-knows-but-that-on
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20141107T191159Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/50042_ellisoncallahanbw_photograph.rev.1414780020.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:31409
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/50042_ellisoncallahanbw_photograph.rev.1414780020.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Professor John Callahan will discuss how Ellison's le
tters\, when published in 2016\, will become an indispensable autobiograp
hical source for new interpretations of his essays and fiction as well as
for understanding the America he lived in and helped shape.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|faculty event|open to the public|send-to-undergr
aduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141204T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141204T220000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Paradise Lost: A Public Reading
DESCRIPTION:Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for a group reading of Jo
hn Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost. \; This event will take place
from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: December 4\, December 8\, and Dece
mber 9.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for
a group reading of John Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost.
0\; This event will take place from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: Dec
ember 4\, December 8\, and December 9.
UID:20141205T020000Z-32039@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20141202T113002Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/32039-paradise-lost-a-public-r
eading
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20141202T193222Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/50643_paradise_lost.rev.1417548681.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:32039
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/50643_paradise_lost.rev.1417548681.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for a group readi
ng of John Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost. \; This event
will take place from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: December 4\, Dece
mber 8\, and December 9.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141208T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141208T220000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Paradis Lost: A Public Reading
DESCRIPTION:Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for a group reading of Jo
hn Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost. \; This event will take place
from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: December 4\, December 8\, and Dece
mber 9.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for
a group reading of John Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost.
0\; This event will take place from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: Dec
ember 4\, December 8\, and December 9.
UID:20141209T020000Z-32141@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20141205T113030Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/32141-paradis-lost-a-public-re
ading
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20141205T193030Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/50643_paradise_lost.rev.1417548681.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:32141
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/50643_paradise_lost.rev.1417548681.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for a group readi
ng of John Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost. \; This event
will take place from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: December 4\, Dece
mber 8\, and December 9.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|reading|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141209T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141209T220000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Paradise Lost: A Public Reading
DESCRIPTION:Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for a group reading of Jo
hn Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost. \; This event will take place
from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: December 4\, December 8\, and Dece
mber 9.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for
a group reading of John Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost.
0\; This event will take place from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: Dec
ember 4\, December 8\, and December 9.
UID:20141210T020000Z-32142@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20141205T113313Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/32142-paradise-lost-a-public-r
eading
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20141205T193313Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/50765_paradise_lost.rev.1417807984.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:32142
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/50765_paradise_lost.rev.1417807984.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join Jerry Harp's English 333 class for a group readi
ng of John Milton's epic poem\, Paradise Lost. \; This event
will take place from 6:00 pm-10:00 pm over three days: December 4\, Dece
mber 8\, and December 9.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|reading|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150127T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150127T163000
LOCATION:Pamplin Society Room\, Watzek Library
GEO:45.450919;-122.669177
SUMMARY:2015 Dixon Award Presentations by Lillian Tuttle and Caitlin Degnon
DESCRIPTION:Please join the English department for a presentation by 2014
Dixon Award co-winners\, Lillian Tuttle and Caitlin Degnon. \; Lilli
an used the award to attend the "Mansfield in France" conference in Paris
. \; Caitlin traveled to the Library of Congress in Washington\, D.C.
to study the influence of anthropology on Zora Neale Hurston's racial de
pictions. The Dixon Award was established in 2002 by the Dixon Family Fo
undation\, thanks to the generous efforts of alumni Hillary ('99) and Ada
m ('01) Dixon. \; Each year a junior English major is awarded a $2\,5
00 research and travel grant to enrich his or her current studies in prep
aration for senior year.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the English department for
a presentation by 2014 Dixon Award co-winners\, Lillian Tuttle and Caitli
n Degnon. \; Lillian used the award to attend the "Mansfield in Franc
e" conference in Paris. \; Caitlin traveled to the Library of Congres
s in Washington\, D.C. to study the influence of anthropology on Zora Nea
le Hurston's racial depictions.
The Dixon Award was establi
shed in 2002 by the Dixon Family Foundation\, thanks to the generous effo
rts of alumni Hillary ('99) and Adam ('01) Dixon. \; Each year a juni
or English major is awarded a $2\,500 research and travel grant to enrich
his or her current studies in preparation for senior year.
UID:20150127T233000Z-32758@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150114T151036Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/32758-2015-dixon-award-present
ations-by-lillian-tuttle
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150114T233220Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:32758
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for a presentation
by 2014 Dixon Award co-winners\, Lillian Tuttle and Caitlin Degnon. 
\; Lillian used the award to attend the "Mansfield in France" conference
in Paris. \; Caitlin traveled to the Library of Congress in Washingto
n\, D.C. to study the influence of anthropology on Zora Neale Hurston's r
acial depictions.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:dixon|English|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150129T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150129T190000
LOCATION:Albany Quadrangle\, Smith Hall
GEO:45.451415;-122.668211
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading by Victor RodrÃguez Nuñez
DESCRIPTION:Victor RodrÃguez Nuñez is a professor at Kenyon College as
well as a celebrated writer of both Spanish and English poetry. \;He
has published twelve books of poetry along with numerous editions of his
Selected Poems\, the most recent being \;Cuarto de desahogo \;(L
etras Cubanas\, 2013). \;His poetry has received major awards through
out the Spanish-speaking world and he has read his work in over twenty co
untries. Along with his many academic endeavors\, he has been active as
a cultural journalist in Cuba\, Nicaragua\, and Colombia\, and has served
as an editor of both cultural magazines and specialized journals\, most
recently the Mexican literary magazine\, La Otra (www.laotrarevista.com).
RodrÃguez-Núñez is also an accomplished translator\; his latest book-
length collections are translations of Mark Strand and John Kinsella. He
divides his time between Gambier\, Ohio and Havana\, Cuba.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Victor RodrÃguez Nuñez is a professor
at Kenyon College as well as a celebrated writer of both Spanish and Eng
lish poetry. \;He has published twelve books of poetry along with nu
merous editions of his Selected Poems\, the most recent being \;C
uarto de desahogo \;(Letras Cubanas\, 2013). \;His poetry ha
s received major awards throughout the Spanish-speaking world and he has
read his work in over twenty countries.
Along with his many acade
mic endeavors\, he has been active as a cultural journalist in Cuba\, Nic
aragua\, and Colombia\, and has served as an editor of both cultural maga
zines and specialized journals\, most recently the Mexican literary magaz
ine\, La Otra (www.laotrarevista.com). RodrÃguez-Núñez is als
o an accomplished translator\; his latest book-length collections are tra
nslations of Mark Strand and John Kinsella. He divides his time between G
ambier\, Ohio and Havana\, Cuba.
UID:20150130T020000Z-30304@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140923T100217Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30304-poetry-reading-by-victor
-rodriguez-nunez
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150127T182219Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/49164_vrn_photo.rev.1411491632.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30304
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/49164_vrn_photo.rev.1411491632.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us for an evening of poetry with Victor R
odrÃguez Nuñez. This event is co-sponsored by the English Department an
d the Hispanic and Studies and Latin American Studies Departments.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|Hispanic Studies|humanities|Lat
in American Studies|literary arts|reading|send-to-undergraduate|Spanish|s
tudent event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150212T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150212T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading by Endi Bogue Hartigan and Gillian Conoley
DESCRIPTION:Gillian Conoley was born in Austin Texas\, where\, on its rur
al outskirts\, her father and mother owned and operated a radio station.
She is the author of seven collections of poetry\, including PEACE\, just
released with Omnidawn in spring 2014\, The Plot Genie\, Profane Halo\,
Lovers in the Used World\, and Tall Stranger\, a finalist for the Nationa
l Book Critics Circle Award. Her work has received the Jerome J. Shestack
Poetry Prize from The American Poetry Review\, a National Endowment for
the Arts grant\, and a Fund for Poetry Award. Conoley's work is widely an
thologized\, most recently in W.W. Norton's new Postmodern American Poetr
y. Her translations of Henri Michaux A Thousand Times Broken: Three Books
by Henri Michaux\, appearing in English for the first time\, will be out
with City Lights in fall 2014. Editor and founder of Volt magazine\, she
is Professor and Poet-in-Residence at Sonoma State University. \;
Endi Bogue Hartigan is the author of \;Pool [5 choruses]\, selected
by Cole Swensen for the Omnidawn Open Prize and released from Omnidawn in
April 2014\, and \;One Sun Storm selected for the 2008 Colorado P
rize for Poetry and a finalist for the Oregon Book Award. Her work has ap
peared in magazines and anthologies including New American Writing\, Vers
e\, Chicago Review\, Colorado Review\, Pleiades\, VOLT\, Free Verse\, Pee
p/​Show\, LVNG\, Jack London is Dead\,as well as a collaborative chapbo
ok\, out of the flowering ribs\, created with artist Linda Hutchins. She
lives in Portland\, Oregon with her husband and son. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Gillian Conoley was born in Austin Texa
s\, where\, on its rural outskirts\, her father and mother owned and oper
ated a radio station. She is the author of seven collections of poetry\,
including PEACE\, just released with Omnidawn in spring 2014\, <
em>The Plot Genie\, Profane Halo\, Lovers in the Used World\, and Tall St
ranger\, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. Her
work has received the Jerome J. Shestack Poetry Prize from The American P
oetry Review\, a National Endowment for the Arts grant\, and a Fund for P
oetry Award. Conoley's work is widely anthologized\, most recently in W.W
. Norton's new Postmodern American Poetry. Her translations of Henri Mich
aux A Thousand Times Broken: Three Books by Henri Michaux
\, appearing in English for the first time\, will be out with City Ligh
ts in fall 2014. Editor and founder of
Volt magazine\, she is Pr
ofessor and Poet-in-Residence at Sonoma State University.
\;
Endi Bogue Hartigan is the author of \;Pool [5 choruses]
\, selected by Cole Swensen for the Omnidawn Open Prize and released
from Omnidawn in April 2014\, and \;One Sun Storm select
ed for the 2008 Colorado Prize for Poetry and a finalist for the Oregon B
ook Award. Her work has appeared in magazines and anthologies including <
em>New American Writing\, Verse\, Chicago Review\, Colorado Review\, Plei
ades\, VOLT\, Free Verse\, Peep/​Show\, LVNG\, Jack London is Dead\,as well as a collaborative chapbook\, out of the flowering ribs\,
em> created with artist Linda Hutchins. She lives in Portland\, Oregon wi
th her husband and son.
\;
UID:20150213T030000Z-30309@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140923T110239Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30309-poetry-reading-by-endi-b
ogue-hartigan-and-gillian
LAST-MODIFIED:20141008T172323Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/49172_screen_shot_2014-09-23_at_104655_am.rev.1411494407.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30309
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/49172_screen_shot_2014-09-23_at_104655_am.rev.1411494407.j
pg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English Department for a wonderful ev
ening with poets Endi Bogue Hartigan and Gillian Conoley. Refreshments wi
ll be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|reading|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150221T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150221T200000
LOCATION:Agnes Flanagan Chapel
GEO:45.450821;-122.671419
SUMMARY:Sister Outsider Poetry at Lewis & Clark
UID:20150222T030000Z-34395@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150218T150758Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/32748
LAST-MODIFIED:20150218T230758Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:34395
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:
Sister Outsider Poetry is an award-winning
duo representing two of the top three female slam poets in the world\, D
ominique Christina and Denice Frohman. Their tour marks the first time th
at two Women of the World Poetry Slam Champions have paired up. They have
appeared on six national poetry slam finals stages and have six champion
ships collectively.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150224T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150224T163000
LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 102
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:Suspense and the Metropolis: Hitchcock In and Beyond the City
DESCRIPTION:Please join the English department for a faculty colloquium w
ith Visiting Assistant Professor of English\, Michael Mirabile. This tal
k entitled\, "Suspense and the Metropolis: Hitchcock In and Beyond the Ci
ty\," will address how the film director Alfred Hitchcock drew on aspects
of modern urban life to \;intensify feelings of suspense for his aud
ience. \; Hitchcock's preferred genre\, the thriller\, became an idea
l vehicle for exploring the impact on individuals of the unprecedented sp
eed \;and constructional heights associated with \;modernity.
0\; Films such as Vertigo (1958) and North by Northwest (1959) additional
ly marked the transition from \;a focus on \;metropolitan \;a
rchitecture to \;a focus \;on national and global networks that l
ink cities \;through systems of transportation and communication.
0\;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Please join the English department fo
r a faculty colloquium with Visiting Assistant Professor of English\, Mic
hael Mirabile.
This talk entitled\, "Suspense and
the Metropolis: Hitchcock In and Beyond the City\," will address how the
film director Alfred Hitchcock drew on aspects of modern urban life to
60\;intensify feelings of suspense for his audience. \; Hitchcock's p
referred genre\, the thriller\, became an ideal vehicle for exploring the
impact on individuals of the unprecedented speed \;and constructiona
l heights associated with \;modernity. \; Films such as Verti
go (1958) and North by Northwest (1959) additionally marked
the transition from \;a focus on \;metropolitan \;architectu
re to \;a focus \;on national and global networks that link citie
s \;through systems of transportation and communication. \;
UID:20150224T233000Z-33904@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150206T105828Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/33904-suspense-and-the-metropo
lis-hitchcock-in-and
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150206T185828Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/51626_michael_mirabile.rev.1423249019.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:33904
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/51626_michael_mirabile.rev.1423249019.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for a faculty coll
oquium with Visiting Assistant Professor of English\, Michael Mirabile.&#
160\; This talk entitled\, "Suspense and the Metropolis: Hitchcock In and
Beyond the City
\," will address how the film director Alfred Hi
tchcock drew on aspects of modern urban life to \;intensify feelings
of suspense for his audience. \; \;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|faculty event|humanities|lecture|open to the pub
lic
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150227
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150228
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575
SUMMARY:Ralph Ellison Centennial Symposium
UID:20150227T170000Z-34511@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150225T151246Z
URL:https://www.lclark.edu/live/events/34184-ralph-ellison-centennial-sym
posium
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150225T231246Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:34511
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-ALL-DAY:1
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Lewis &\; Clark College is proud to present the "R
alph Ellison Centennial Symposium." The event will bring together nationa
lly recognized scholars of literature\, history\, and the arts to explore
Ellison's legacy.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150228T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150228T160000
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575
SUMMARY:Ralph Ellison Centennial Symposium
UID:20150228T080000Z-34511@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150225T151246Z
URL:https://www.lclark.edu/live/events/34184-ralph-ellison-centennial-sym
posium
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150225T231246Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:34511
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Lewis &\; Clark College is proud to present the "R
alph Ellison Centennial Symposium." The event will bring together nationa
lly recognized scholars of literature\, history\, and the arts to explore
Ellison's legacy.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150304T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150304T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Fiction Reading by Anna Keesey
DESCRIPTION:Anna Keesey is a graduate of Stanford University and the Iowa
Writer's Workshop. \;Her work has appeared in a number of journals
and anthologies\, including \;Best American Short Stories. \;She
is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing F
ellowship and has held residencies at MacDowell\, Bread Loaf\, Yaddo\, an
d Provincetown. \;Keesey teaches English and creative writing at Lin
field College in McMinnville\, Oregon. Her debut novel\, Little Century&
#160\;maps our country's cutthroat legacy of dispossession and greed\, as
well as celebrating the ecstatic visions of what America could become. I
t has just been awarded the Janet Heidinger Kafka prize for Fiction\, pre
viously given to Ursula LeGuin\, Ann Patchett and Toni Morrison.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Anna Keesey is a graduate of Stanford U
niversity and the Iowa Writer's Workshop. \;Her work has appeared in
a number of journals and anthologies\, including \;Best American
Short Stories. \;She is the recipient of a National Endowment
for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship and has held residencies at MacD
owell\, Bread Loaf\, Yaddo\, and Provincetown. \;Keesey teaches Engl
ish and creative writing at Linfield College in McMinnville\, Oregon.
Her debut novel\, Little Century \;maps our country's c
utthroat legacy of dispossession and greed\, as well as celebrating the e
cstatic visions of what America could become. It has just been awarded th
e Janet Heidinger Kafka prize for Fiction\, previously given to Ursula Le
Guin\, Ann Patchett and Toni Morrison.
UID:20150305T013000Z-30317@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140923T111041Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30317-fiction-reading-by-anna-
keesey
LAST-MODIFIED:20140925T172350Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/49179_y2hevrg9vewlyzjyjr9lny1pqugbkq4z0cbo0yeo4vffg40utfkow5z-k68bh8_
4xu5iaww924-h566.rev.1411495490.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30317
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/49179_y2hevrg9vewlyzjyjr9lny1pqugbkq4z0cbo0yeo4vffg40utfko
w5z-k68bh8_4xu5iaww924-h566.rev.1411495490.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English Department for a fiction read
ing with author Anna Keesey. Refreshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|reading|send-to-u
ndergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150401T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150401T170000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center
GEO:45.44918;-122.670969
SUMMARY:Lorry Lokey Faculty Excellence Awards Ceremony & Reception
UID:20150401T230000Z-34816@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150309T103740Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/34416
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150309T173838Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/8/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/21404_zimring_june2011.rev.1373936897.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:34816
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/8/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/21404_zimring_june2011.rev.1373936897.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Professor of English and Larry Lokey Faculty Ex
cellence Award recipient Rishona Zimring
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:
\n Lewis &\; Clark is proud to recognize and s
upport distinguished faculty in the College of Arts and Sciences through
the Lorry Lokey Faculty Excellence Awards. \; For 2015\, the interim
dean of the college of arts and sciences\, Jerusha Detweiler-Bedell\,
0\;will present the award to four faculty members selected for their insp
ired teaching\, rigorous scholarship\, demonstrated leadership\, and crea
tive accomplishments:\n
\n
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150421T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150421T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading by Linda Bierds and Emily Wilson
DESCRIPTION:Emily Wilson grew up in Maine and now makes her home in Iowa.
She attended the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop and has published
two books of poetry\, The Keep (2001) and Micrographia (2009). Her third
collection\, The Great Medieval Yellows\, will arrive from Canarium Books
in 2015. She has received a creative writing fellowship from the Nationa
l Endowment for the Arts and designs and prints letterpress books under t
he imprint\, Spurwink Press. \; Linda Bierds' ninth book of poetry
\, Roget's Illusion\, was published by Putnam's in March\, 2014. Her poem
s have appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies\, including The Atl
antic\, The New Yorker\, The Smithsonian\, Poetry\, and The Best American
Poetry: 2014. In addition to being awarded a MacArthur Foundation fellow
ship\, Professor Bierds has received the PEN/West Poetry Prize\, the Wash
ington State Governor's Writers Award\, the Consuelo Ford Award from the
Poetry Society of America\, four Pushcart Prizes\, the Virginia Quarterly
Review's Emily Clark Balch Poetry Prize\, and fellowships from the Ingra
m Merrill Foundation\, the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation\, the Rockefell
er Foundation\, and twice from the National Endowment for the Arts. In th
e last few years\, Professor Bierds has been a judge for the nation's mos
t distinguished poetry prizes\, including the Ruth Lilly Poetry Award\, t
he Walt Whitman Poetry Award\, The Pushcart Prize\, and the National Book
Award. In recognition of her achievements\, Oglethorpe University awarde
d Professor Bierds the degree of Doctor of Letters\, honoris cousa\, in M
ay\, 2011.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Emily Wilson grew up in Maine and now m
akes her home in Iowa. She attended the University of Iowa Writers' Works
hop and has published two books of poetry\, The Keep (2001) and
Micrographia (2009). Her third collection\, The Great Mediev
al Yellows\, will arrive from Canarium Books in 2015. She has receiv
ed a creative writing fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts
and designs and prints letterpress books under the imprint\, Spurwink Pr
ess.
\;
Linda Bierds' ninth book of poetry\, Rog
et's Illusion\, was published by Putnam's in March\, 2014. Her poems
have appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies\, including The
Atlantic\, The New Yorker\, The Smithsonian\, Poetry\, and The B
est American Poetry: 2014. In addition to being awarded a MacArthur
Foundation fellowship\, Professor Bierds has received the PEN/West Poetry
Prize\, the Washington State Governor's Writers Award\, the Consuelo For
d Award from the Poetry Society of America\, four Pushcart Prizes\, the V
irginia Quarterly Review's Emily Clark Balch Poetry Prize\, and fellowshi
ps from the Ingram Merrill Foundation\, the Guggenheim Memorial Foundatio
n\, the Rockefeller Foundation\, and twice from the National Endowment fo
r the Arts. In the last few years\, Professor Bierds has been a judge for
the nation's most distinguished poetry prizes\, including the Ruth Lilly
Poetry Award\, the Walt Whitman Poetry Award\, The Pushcart Prize\, and
the National Book Award. In recognition of her achievements\, Oglethorpe
University awarded Professor Bierds the degree of Doctor of Letters\, hon
oris cousa\, in May\, 2011.
UID:20150422T010000Z-30318@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140923T111820Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30318-poetry-reading-by-linda-
bierds-and-emily-wilson
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140925T173043Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/49186_screen_shot_2014-09-23_at_111441_am.rev.1411496046.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30318
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/49186_screen_shot_2014-09-23_at_111441_am.rev.1411496046.j
pg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come join the English Department for an evening of po
etry with Linda Bierds and Emily Wilson! Refreshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|send-to-undergrad
uate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150422T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150422T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Literary Review Release Party!
DESCRIPTION:Published annually\, and run entirely by Lewis and Clark stud
ents\, The Literary Review \;provides creative writers with a hands-o
n process — in generating submissions\, in working on an editorial boar
d\, and in laying out a magazine.The Literary Review \;publishes poet
ry\, fiction\, and creative non-fiction. The next volume will be availabl
e in the spring of 2015. \; Submission Deadline: February 2015
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Published annually\, and run entirely b
y Lewis and Clark students\, The Literary Review \;provides
creative writers with a hands-on process — in generating submissions\,
in working on an editorial board\, and in laying out a magazine.
The Literary Review \;publishes poetry\, fiction\, and creativ
e non-fiction. The next volume will be available in the spring of 2015.
p> \;
Submission Deadline: February 2015
UID:20150423T020000Z-30321@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140923T112507Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30321-literary-review-release-
party
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150318T180527Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30321
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Literary Review\, Lewis &\; Clark's student-ru
n literary magazine will be celebrating the release of this year's editio
n with food and good company. \; The magazine features poetry\, ficti
on\, and creative non-fiction written by students from various majors. Pl
ease join us!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|reading|student event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150428T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150428T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Senior Fiction Reading
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for readings of original works of fiction by s
enior students from the Advanced Fiction Writing course. \; Refreshme
nts will be provided. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join us for readings of original
works of fiction by senior students from the Advanced Fiction Writing co
urse. \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forward to se
eing you there!
UID:20150429T020000Z-30322@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140923T112602Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30322-senior-fiction-reading
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140925T173023Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30322
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us for readings of original works of fict
ion by senior students from the Advanced Fiction Writing course. \; R
efreshments will be provided. \; We look forward to seeing you there
!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|reading|send-to-u
ndergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150429T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150429T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Senior Poetry Reading
DESCRIPTION:Please join us as the 2014-2015 Lewis &\; Clark College Wr
iter's Series concludes with readings of original works of poetry by seni
or students from Mary Szybist's Advanced Poetry Writing course. \; Re
freshments will be provided. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join us as the 2014-2015 Lewis &
amp\; Clark College Writer's Series concludes with readings of original w
orks of poetry by senior students from Mary Szybist's Advanced Poetry Wri
ting course. \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forward
to seeing you there!
UID:20150430T020000Z-30524@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140925T095741Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30524-senior-poetry-reading
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140925T173000Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30524
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us as the 2014-2015 Lewis &\; Clark Co
llege Writer's Series concludes with readings of original works of poetry
by senior students from Mary Szybist's Advanced Poetry Writing course.&#
160\; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forward to seeing you
there!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|reading|send-to-u
ndergraduate|student event|student
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151016T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151016T160000
LOCATION:Watzek Library\, Heritage Room
GEO:45.450919;-122.669177
SUMMARY:John F. Callahan Acquisition Announcement and Open House Reception
DESCRIPTION:Lewis &\; Clark College Special Collections and Archives a
re excited to announce the acquisition of the John F. Callahan Literary A
rchives. Lewis &\; Clark College Morgan S. Odell Professor Emeritus of
Humanities\, and Literary Executor to the Ralph Ellison Estate\, Callaha
n earned his BA from the University of Connecticut and his MA and Ph.
D. from the University of Illinois. Callahan joined the faculty at Lewis
&\; Clark College in Portland\, Oregon in 1967 and taught here for 48
years\, retiring in 2015. The collection includes material built from Ca
llahan's works as a renowned scholar\, writer and educator\, including Ca
llahan's notes\, drafts and related correspondence surrounding his work a
s Ralph Ellison's Literary Executor and as an Ellison scholar. The unique
ness of the collection provides researchers access to never-before-seen n
otes and sketches on the work of Ralph Ellison\, the acclaimed African-Am
erican author of Invisible Man\, as well as insight into Ellison scholars
hip from one of the foremost experts in the field. Callahan\, a close fr
iend to the Ellison family\, was named Literary Executor to the Ralph Ell
ison Estate by Ellison's widow\, Fanny McConnell Ellison\, following Ralp
h's death in 1994. The collection includes: an extensive amount of materi
al by Ralph Ellison in facsimile\, including copies of the collected corr
espondence of Ellison\, the originals of which rest at the Library of Con
gress\; numerous rare original publications containing Ellison work\; cop
ies of many of Ellison's earliest stories and drafts\; and translations o
f Ellison texts in over 20 languages. Callahan has written or edited num
erous volumes related to African-American and 20th century literature Inc
luding The Illusions of a Nation: Myth and History in the Novels of F. Sc
ott Fitzgerald\, 1972\; and In the African-American Grain: The Pursuit of
Voice in 20th Century Black Fiction\, 1988. African American literature
and the work of Ralph Ellison have been a focus of Callahan's scholarly w
ork since he published the 1977 article "The Historical Frequencies of Ra
lph Waldo Ellison" in Negro American Literature Forum (now African Americ
an Review). As an Ellison scholar Callahan has also published Ellison's I
nvisible Man\, 2001\; Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man : a Casebook\, 2004\;
Callahan edited the Ralph Ellison short story collection Flying Home and
Other Stories\, 1996 and The Collected Essays of Ralph Ellison\, 1995\;
Co-edited with Albert Murray the Modern Library edition of Trading Twelve
s: The Selected Letters of Ralph Ellison\, 2000. As the Literary Executor
to Ralph Ellison\, Callahan worked as the primary editor for the posthum
ously-released Ralph Ellison novel Juneteenth\, and the complete edited m
anuscript Three Days Before the Shooting…\, 2010. Callahan's own litera
ry work includes the novel A Man You Could Love\, Fulcrum Publishing\, 20
07\, and the upcoming novel The Learning Room. Callahan is currently in t
he process of completing the trilogy with the novel Belonging. Lewis &am
p\; Clark Special Collections and Archives are honored to add the John F.
Callahan Collection to our list of literary archives including those of
Matterhorn author Karl Marlantes\, and National Book Award winner and ren
owned poet William Stafford. More information is available at our websit
e specialcollections.lclark.edu (http://specialcollections.lclark.edu/).J
ohn F. Callahan Literary Archive Open House ReceptionWatzek Library Speci
al Collections and Archives Heritage Room October 16\, 3 pm- 4 pm For
more information on Homecoming and Family Weekend events: http://college.
lclark.edu/offices/alumni/homecoming (https://college.lclark.edu/offices/
alumni/homecoming)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Lewis &\; Clark College Sp
ecial Collections and Archives are excited to announce the acquisition of
the John F. Callahan Literary Archives. Lewis &\; Clark College Morga
n S. Odell Professor Emeritus of Humanities\, and Literary Executor to th
e Ralph Ellison Estate\, Callahan earned his BA from the University of
Connecticut and his MA and PhD from the University of Illinois. Calla
han joined the faculty at Lewis &\; Clark College in Portland\, Oregon
in 1967 and taught here for 48 years\, retiring in 2015.
The collection includes material built from Callahan's works as a reno
wned scholar\, writer and educator\, including Callahan's notes\, drafts
and related correspondence surrounding his work as Ralph Ellison's Litera
ry Executor and as an Ellison scholar. The uniqueness of the collection p
rovides researchers access to never-before-seen notes and sketches on the
work of Ralph Ellison\, the acclaimed African-American author of Inv
isible Man\, as well as insight into Ellison scholarship from one of
the foremost experts in the field.
Callahan\, a close
friend to the Ellison family\, was named Literary Executor to the Ralph E
llison Estate by Ellison's widow\, Fanny McConnell Ellison\, following Ra
lph's death in 1994. The collection includes: an extensive amount of mate
rial by Ralph Ellison in facsimile\, including copies of the collected co
rrespondence of Ellison\, the originals of which rest at the Library of C
ongress\; numerous rare original publications containing Ellison work\; c
opies of many of Ellison's earliest stories and drafts\; and translations
of Ellison texts in over 20 languages.
Callahan has wr
itten or edited numerous volumes related to African-American and 20th cen
tury literature Including The Illusions of a Nation: Myth and History
in the Novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald\, 1972\; and In the Africa
n-American Grain: The Pursuit of Voice in 20th Century Black Fiction
\, 1988. African American literature and the work of Ralph Ellison have b
een a focus of Callahan's scholarly work since he published the 1977 arti
cle "The Historical Frequencies of Ralph Waldo Ellison" in Negro Amer
ican Literature Forum (now African American Review). As an
Ellison scholar Callahan has also published Ellison's Invisible Man
em>\, 2001\; Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man : a Casebook\, 2004\;
Callahan edited the Ralph Ellison short story collection Flying Home
and Other Stories\, 1996 and The Collected Essays of Ralph Elli
son\, 1995\; Co-edited with Albert Murray the Modern Library edition
of Trading Twelves: The Selected Letters of Ralph Ellison\, 200
0. As the Literary Executor to Ralph Ellison\, Callahan worked as the pri
mary editor for the posthumously-released Ralph Ellison novel Junetee
nth\, and the complete edited manuscript Three Days Before the S
hooting…\, 2010. Callahan's own literary work includes the novel <
em>A Man You Could Love\, Fulcrum Publishing\, 2007\, and the upcomi
ng novel The Learning Room. Callahan is currently in the process
of completing the trilogy with the novel Belonging.
Lewis &\; Clark Special Collections and Archives are honored to
add the John F. Callahan Collection to our list of literary archives inc
luding those of Matterhorn author Karl Marlantes\, and National
Book Award winner and renowned poet William Stafford.
M
ore information is available at our website specialcollections.lclark.edu.
John F. Callahan Literary Archive Open House Recepti
on
Watzek Library Special Collections and Archives
H
eritage Room
October 16\, 3 pm- 4 pm
For more in
formation on Homecoming and Family Weekend events: http://college.l
clark.edu/offices/alumni/homecoming
UID:20151016T220000Z-90860@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20151006T092107Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/90670-john-f-callahan-acquisit
ion-announcement-and-open
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20151006T162107Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/417/width/80/height/80/c
rop/1/55553_callahan.rev.1444086991.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:90860
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/417/width/80/
height/80/crop/1/55553_callahan.rev.1444086991.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Lewis &\; Clark College Special Collections and Ar
chives are excited to announce the acquisition of the John F. Callahan Li
terary Archives. \;Please join us for an Open House Reception on Fri
day\, \;October 16\, from 3-4 pm in the Heritage Room of Watzek Libra
ry.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151029T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151029T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by John Treat
DESCRIPTION:John Whittier Treat\, a native of New Haven\, joined the Yale
faculty in 1999 after teaching for eighteen years at the University of W
ashington\, Berkeley\, Stanford and Texas. He has been Professor Emeritus
at Yale since 2014. He continues to teach courses in modern Japanese lit
erature and criticism\, and occasionally Korean studies and LGBT studies.
In recent years he has had visiting appointments at Seoul National Unive
rsity\, the University of Oslo and the University of New South Wales. At
Yale he has served as the East Asian Languages and Literatures Department
chair and Director of Graduate Studies\, is affiliated faculty in Women\
, Gender and Sexuality Studies and has chaired Yale's LGBT Studies Commit
tee. Treat has held elective office in the Association of Asian Studies a
nd the Modern Language Association\, and he edited the Journal of Japanes
e Studies for ten years. His essays have appeared in positions\, PMLA\, t
he \,Journal of Asian Studies\, the Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies\,
\,boundary 2\, and Gendai Shiso\,. His 1995 book Writing Ground Zero: Jap
anese Literature and the Atomic Bomb\, won the John Whitney Hall Prize an
d has recently been translated into Japanese. His two current book proje
cts include a history of modern Japanese literature (Governing Metaphors:
The Rise and Fall of Modern Japanese Literature) and a study of Korean i
ntellectuals under Japanese occupation (Too Close to the Sun). He has rec
ently completed his first novel\, The Rise and Fall of the Yellow House a
nd is at work on a second\, First Consonants. His graduate students have
gone on to tenure-track positions at Princeton\, Dartmouth\, Minnesota\,
Kentucky\, William and Mary\, Utah\, Grinnell\, Pittsburgh\, Wisconsin\,
Berkeley\, Oregon\, Montana\, Macalester\,Hamilton\, Iowa and Simon Frase
r. \;The Rise and Fall of the Yellow House Jeff and other newcomer
s to Seattle find their lives crossing paths in the Yellow House\, a spra
wling old home at the top of Capital Hill\, Seattle's gay and lesbian nei
ghborhood. Tragedy and healing bring Jeff and his new friends together in
a story that ends in an epiphany few readers will anticipate.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: John Whittier Treat\, a native of New H
aven\, joined the Yale faculty in 1999 after teaching for eighteen years
at the University of Washington\, Berkeley\, Stanford and Texas. He has b
een Professor Emeritus at Yale since 2014. He continues to teach courses
in modern Japanese literature and criticism\, and occasionally Korean stu
dies and LGBT studies. In recent years he has had visiting appointments a
t Seoul National University\, the University of Oslo and the University o
f New South Wales. At Yale he has served as the East Asian Languages and
Literatures Department chair and Director of Graduate Studies\, is affili
ated faculty in Women\, Gender and Sexuality Studies and has chaired Yale
's LGBT Studies Committee. Treat has held elective office in the Associat
ion of Asian Studies and the Modern Language Association\, and he edited
the Journal of Japanese Studies for ten years. His essays have a
ppeared in positions\, PMLA\, the \,Journal of Asia
n Studies\, the Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies\, \,
boundary 2\, and Gendai Shiso\,. His 1995 book Writing
Ground Zero: Japanese Literature and the Atomic Bomb\, won the John
Whitney Hall Prize and has recently been translated into Japanese.
<
br /> His two current book projects include a history of modern Japanese
literature (Governing Metaphors: The Rise and Fall of Modern Japanes
e Literature) and a study of Korean intellectuals under Japanese occ
upation (Too Close to the Sun). He has recently completed his fi
rst novel\, The Rise and Fall of the Yellow House and is at work
on a second\, First Consonants. His graduate students have gone
on to tenure-track positions at Princeton\, Dartmouth\, Minnesota\, Kent
ucky\, William and Mary\, Utah\, Grinnell\, Pittsburgh\, Wisconsin\, Berk
eley\, Oregon\, Montana\, Macalester\,Hamilton\, Iowa and Simon Fraser.
p>
\;
The Rise and Fall of the
Yellow House
Jeff and other newcomers t
o Seattle find their lives crossing paths in the Yellow House\, a sprawli
ng old home at the top of Capital Hill\, Seattle's gay and lesbian neighb
orhood. Tragedy and healing bring Jeff and his new friends together in a
story that ends in an epiphany few readers will anticipate.
UID:20151030T003000Z-89090@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150930T134952Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/89090-a-fiction-reading-by-joh
n-treat
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150930T204952Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/55483_treat_photo.rev.1443645522.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:89090
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/55483_treat_photo.rev.1443645522.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:John Whittier Treat\, a native of New Haven\, joined
the Yale faculty in 1999 after teaching for eighteen years at the Univers
ity of Washington\, Berkeley\, Stanford and Texas. He has been Professor
Emeritus at Yale since 2014. He continues to teach courses in modern Japa
nese literature and criticism\, and occasionally Korean studies and LGBT
studies. \; He has recently completed his first novel\, The Rise
and Fall of the Yellow House and is at work on a second\, First
Consonants. \; This event is co-sponsored by the departments of
English\, History\, and Gender Studies.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|fiction|history|literary arts|open to the public
|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151102T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151102T173000
LOCATION:Miller Center\, Room 102
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:Oh God My Cousin: Thoughts At the Intersection of Life and Litera
ture
DESCRIPTION:Please join the English department for a faculty colloquium w
ith Lyell Asher. \; Professor Asher will give a talk entitled\, "Oh G
od My Cousin: \; Thoughts At the Intersection of Life and Literature.
" \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forward to seeing
you there!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the English department for
a faculty colloquium with Lyell Asher. \; Professor Asher will give a
talk entitled\, "Oh God My Cousin: \; Thoughts At the Intersection o
f Life and Literature." \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We l
ook forward to seeing you there!
UID:20151103T003000Z-96497@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20151026T093332Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/96497-oh-god-my-cousin-thought
s-at-the-intersection-of
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20151026T163332Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/26_Lyell08internet.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:96497
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/26_Lyell08internet.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for a faculty coll
oquium with Lyell Asher. \; Professor Asher will give a talk entitled
\, "Oh God My Cousin: \; Thoughts At the Intersection of Life and Lit
erature." \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forward to
seeing you there!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|faculty event|lecture|open to the public|send-to
-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151111T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151111T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Percival Everett
DESCRIPTION:Percival Everett is Distinguished Professor of English at the
University of Southern California and the author of nearly thirty books\
, including Percival Everett by Virgil Russell\, Assumption\, Erasure\, I
Am Not Sidney Poitier\, and Glyph. He is the recipient of the Academy Aw
ard from the American Academy of Arts and Letters\, the Hurston/Wright Le
gacy Award\, the Believer Book Award\, and the 2006 PEN USA Center Award
for Fiction. He has fly fished the west for over thirty years. He lives i
n Los Angeles. \;Refreshments provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Percival Everett is Dist
inguished Professor of English at the University of Southern California a
nd the author of nearly thirty books\, including Percival Everett by
Virgil Russell\, Assumption\, Erasure\, I Am Not Sidney
Poitier\, and Glyph. He is the recipient of the Academy Aw
ard from the American Academy of Arts and Letters\, the Hurston/Wright Le
gacy Award\, the Believer Book Award\, and the 2006 PEN USA Cent
er Award for Fiction. He has fly fished the west for over thirty years. H
e lives in Los Angeles.
\;
Refreshments provided.<
/em>
UID:20151112T013000Z-78948@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150909T132339Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/78948-a-fiction-reading-by-per
cival-everett
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150909T203424Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/54957_percival.rev.1441830043.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:78948
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/54957_percival.rev.1441830043.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Percival Everett is Distinguished Pr
ofessor of English at the University of Southern California and the autho
r of nearly thirty books\, including Percival Everett by Virgil Russe
ll\, Assumption\, Erasure\, I Am Not Sidney Poitier\, and Glyph. He is the recipient of the Academy Award from the
American Academy of Arts and Letters\, the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award\,
the Believer Book Award\, and the 2006 PEN USA Center Award for
Fiction. He has fly fished the west for over thirty years. He lives in L
os Angeles.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|fiction|literary arts|open to the public|reading
|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151117T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151117T170000
LOCATION:Watzek Library\, Pamplin Society Room
GEO:45.450919;-122.669177
SUMMARY:2015 Dixon Award Presentations by English Majors Emile Dultra and
Emma Post
DESCRIPTION:The Dixon Award was established in 2002 by the Dixon Family F
oundation\, thanks to the generous efforts of alumni Hillary ("˜99) and
Adam ("˜01) Dixon. Each year a junior English major is awarded a $2\,500
research and travel grant to enrich his or her current studies in prepar
ation for senior year.Emile Dultra and Emma Post were both recipients in
2015. Emile's project was a comparative study of Ezra Pound and Gertrude
Stein in the context of Fascism. Her research was conducted at the Harry
Ransom Center in Austin\, Texas. \; Emma traveled to Glasgow\, Scotla
nd where she conducted research on the visual and poetic work of Edwin Mo
rgan in the Special Collections at the University of Glasgow. Please joi
n us in celebrating their work. \; In addition\, this will be a uniqu
e opportunity for junior English majors to ask questions about the grant
and how to apply. \; Refreshments will be provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The Dixon Award was established in 2002
by the Dixon Family Foundation\, thanks to the generous efforts of alumn
i Hillary ("˜99) and Adam ("˜01) Dixon. Each year a junior English majo
r is awarded a $2\,500 research and travel grant to enrich his or her cur
rent studies in preparation for senior year.
Emile Dul
tra and Emma Post were both recipients in 2015.
Emile's project was a comparative study of Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein
in the context of Fascism. Her research was conducted at the Harry Ranso
m Center in Austin\, Texas. \; Emma traveled to Glasgow\, Scotland wh
ere she conducted research on the visual and poetic work of Edwin Morgan
in the Special Collections at the University of Glasgow.
Ple
ase join us in celebrating their work. \; In addition\, this will be
a unique opportunity for junior English majors to ask questions about the
grant and how to apply. \; Refreshments will be pro
vided.
UID:20151118T000000Z-90585@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20151005T105132Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/90585-2015-dixon-award-present
ations-by-english-majors
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20151013T171530Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:90585
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Dixon Award grant recipients Emile Dultra and Emma Po
st will present their research findings to faculty\, students\, and the c
ommunity. \; Please join us in celebrating their work. \; In addi
tion\, this will be a unique opportunity for junior English majors to ask
questions about the $2\,500 research and travel grant and how to apply.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:dixon|English|presentation|send-to-undergraduate|student
event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151202T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151202T193000
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Willy Vlautin
DESCRIPTION:Born and raised in Reno\, Nevada\, Vlautin started playing gu
itar and writing songs as a teenager and quickly became immersed in music
. It was a Paul Kelly song\, based on Raymond Carver's Too Much Water So
Close to Home that inspired him to start writing stories. Vlautin has pub
lished four novels: THE MOTEL LIFE (2007–NYT Editor's choice and notabl
e book\, made into a major motion picture starring Dakota Fanning\, Emile
Hirsh\, Stephen Dorff\, Kris Kristofferson)\, NORTHLINE (2008)\, LEAN ON
PETE (2010-Winner of the Ken Kesey Award for Fiction\, short-listed for
the IMPAC award)\, and THE FREE (2014-Winner of the Oregon People's Choic
e Award). Vlautin founded the band Richmond Fontaine in 1994. The band h
as produced nine studio albums to date\, plus a handful of live recording
s and EPs. Driven by Vlautin's dark\, story-like songwriting\, the band h
as achieved critical acclaim at home and across Europe. 2014 saw the debu
t of Vlautin's new band\, The Delines\, featuring vocalist Amy Boone (The
Damnations). Their album\, Colfax received rave reviews from across Euro
pe and the United States. Vlautin currently resides in Scappoose\, Orego
n. \;Refreshments provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Born and raised in Reno\, Nevada\, Vlau
tin started playing guitar and writing songs as a teenager and quickly be
came immersed in music. It was a Paul Kelly song\, based on Raymond Carve
r's Too Much Water So Close to Home that inspired him to start writing st
ories. Vlautin has published four novels: THE MOTEL LIFE (2007–NYT Edit
or's choice and notable book\, made into a major motion picture starring
Dakota Fanning\, Emile Hirsh\, Stephen Dorff\, Kris Kristofferson)\, NORT
HLINE (2008)\, LEAN ON PETE (2010-Winner of the Ken Kesey Award for Ficti
on\, short-listed for the IMPAC award)\, and THE FREE (2014-Winner of the
Oregon People's Choice Award).
Vlautin founded the band Richmond
Fontaine in 1994. The band has produced nine studio albums to date\, plu
s a handful of live recordings and EPs. Driven by Vlautin's dark\, story-
like songwriting\, the band has achieved critical acclaim at home and acr
oss Europe. 2014 saw the debut of Vlautin's new band\, The Delines\, feat
uring vocalist Amy Boone (The Damnations). Their album\, Colfax received
rave reviews from across Europe and the United States.
Vlautin cu
rrently resides in Scappoose\, Oregon.
\;
Refreshm
ents provided.
UID:20151203T023000Z-78949@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150909T133359Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/78949-a-fiction-reading-by-wil
ly-vlautin
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20151130T181746Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/54960_vlautin.rev.1441830797.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:78949
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/54960_vlautin.rev.1441830797.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n Born and raised in Reno\, Nevada\, Vlautin sta
rted playing guitar and writing songs as a teenager and quickly became im
mersed in music. It was a Paul Kelly song\, based on Raymond Carver's Too
Much Water So Close to Home that inspired him to start writing stories.
Vlautin has published four novels: The Motel Life (2007–NYT Ed
itor's choice and notable book\, made into a major motion picture starrin
g Dakota Fanning\, Emile Hirsh\, Stephen Dorff\, Kris Kristofferson)\, Northline (2008)\, Lean on Pete (2010-Winner of the Ken K
esey Award for Fiction\, short-listed for the IMPAC award)\, and The
Free (2014-Winner of the Oregon People's Choice Award).\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|fiction|literary arts|open to t
he public|reading|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151211T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151211T150000
LOCATION:Watzek Library Atrium
GEO:45.450919;-122.669177
SUMMARY:World Literature in Dialogue Senior Seminar Poster Session
DESCRIPTION:Please join the students in Professor Rishona Zimring's World
Literature in Dialogue senior seminar as they present their theses at th
e end-of-semester poster session. \; The senior seminar is the capsto
ne course of the English major.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the students in Professor R
ishona Zimring's World Literature in Dialogue senior seminar as
they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; T
he senior seminar is the capstone course of the English major.
UID:20151211T220000Z-106949@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20151203T094717Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/106949-world-literature-in-dia
logue-senior-seminar-poster
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20151203T175151Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/57060_world_literature_poster_session.rev.1449165012.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:106949
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/57060_world_literature_poster_session.rev.1449165012.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the students in Professor Rishona Zimring
's World Literature in Dialogue senior seminar as they present t
heir theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The senior semi
nar is the capstone course of the English major.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|exhibition|open to the public|send-to-undergradu
ate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160127T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160127T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Natalie Serber
DESCRIPTION:Natalie Serber is the author of Shout Her Lovely Name\, (Houg
hton Mifflin Harcourt) a New York Times Notable Book of 2012\, a summer r
eading selection from O\, the Oprah Magazine\, and an Oregonian Top 10 Bo
ok of the Pacific Northwest. Community Chest\, (Two Sylvias Press)\, a me
moir\, was released in the fall of 2015. Her fiction has appeared in The
Bellingham Review\, Gulf Coast\, Inkwell\, and Hunger Mountain. \;Es
says and reviews have appeared in The New York Times\, O\, The Oprah Maga
zine\, The San Francisco Chronicle\, the Oregonian\, The Rumpus\, Salon\,
and Fourth Genre. \;She lives in Portland with her family.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Natalie Serber is the author of Sho
ut Her Lovely Name\, (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) a New York Time
s Notable Book of 2012\, a summer reading selection from O\, the
Oprah Magazine\, and an Oregonian Top 10 Book of the Pacif
ic Northwest. Community Chest\, (Two Sylvias Press)\, a memoir\,
was released in the fall of 2015. Her fiction has appeared in The Be
llingham Review\, Gulf Coast\, Inkwell\, and Hunger Mountain.
\;Essays and reviews have appeared in The New York Times\, O\
, The Oprah Magazine\, The San Francisco Chronicle\, the Oregonian\, The
Rumpus\, Salon\, and Fourth Genre. \;She lives in Port
land with her family.
UID:20160128T030000Z-81617@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150915T104117Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/81617-a-fiction-reading-by-nat
alie-serber
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150915T174117Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/55036_serberbw-291.rev.1442338792.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:81617
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/55036_serberbw-291.rev.1442338792.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:
\n Natalie Serber is the author of Shout Her
Lovely Name\, (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) a New York Times
Notable Book of 2012\, a summer reading selection from O\, the Oprah
Magazine\, and an Oregonian Top 10 Book of the Pacific Nort
hwest. Community Chest\, (Two Sylvias Press)\, a memoir\, was re
leased in the fall of 2015. Her fiction has appeared in The Bellingha
m Review\, Gulf Coast\, Inkwell\, and Hunger Mountain. 
0\;Essays and reviews have appeared in The New York Times\, O\, The O
prah Magazine\, The San Francisco Chronicle\, the Oregonian\, The Rumpus\
, Salon\, and Fourth Genre. \;She lives in Portland wi
th her family.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|fiction|literary arts|open to the public|send-to
-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160211T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160211T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Linda Gregerson
DESCRIPTION:Linda Gregerson was born on August 5\, 1950\, in Elgin\, Illi
nois. She received a BA from Oberlin College in 1971\, an MA from Northwe
stern University\, an MFA from the University of Iowa Writers Workshop\,
and her PhD from Stanford University. Her books of poetry include Prodig
al: New and Selected Poems\, 1976 to 2014 (Mariner Books\, 2015)\;The Sel
vage (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 2012)\; Magnetic North (Houghton Miffli
n Harcourt\, 2007)\, a finalist for the National Book Award\; Waterborne
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 2002)\, winner of the Kingsley Tufts Poetry
Award\; The Woman Who Died in Her Sleep (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 1996
)\, a finalist for both The Poet's Prize and the Lenore Marshall Poetry P
rize (http://www.poets.org/academy-american-poets/prizes/lenore-marshall-
poetry-prize)\; and Fire in the Conservatory (Dragon Gate Press\, 1982).
She is also the author of literary criticism\, including Negative Capabi
lity: Contemporary American Poetry (University of Michigan Press\, 2001)
and The Reformation of the Subject: Spenser\, Milton\, and the English Pr
otestant Epic (Cambridge University Press\, 1995). About her work\, the
poet Rosanna Warren (http://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/rosanna-warren) w
rites\, "Tender and harrowing\, jagged\, severely precise and floodlit wi
th compassion\, Linda Gregerson's poems break and mend poetic language as
they break and mend the heart." Her awards and honors include the Levin
son Prize from Poetry magazine\, the Consuelo Ford Award from the Poetry
Society of America\, the Isabel MacCaffrey Award from the Spenser Society
\, a Guggenheim Fellowship\, and a Pushcart Prize. In 2015\, Gregerson w
as elected a Chancellor (http://www.poets.org/academy-american-poets/chan
cellors) of the Academy of American Poets. She teaches American poetry an
d Renaissance literature at the University of Michigan\, where she also d
irects the MFA program in creative writing. She lives with her husband an
d two daughters in Ann Arbor\, Michigan.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Linda Gregerson was born on August 5\,
1950\, in Elgin\, Illinois. She received a BA from Oberlin College in 197
1\, an MA from Northwestern University\, an MFA from the University of Io
wa Writers Workshop\, and her PhD from Stanford University.
Her b
ooks of poetry include Prodigal: New and Selected Poems\, 1976 to 201
4 (Mariner Books\, 2015)\;The Selvage (Houghton Mifflin Har
court\, 2012)\; Magnetic North (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 2007
)\, a finalist for the National Book Award\; Waterborne (Houghto
n Mifflin Harcourt\, 2002)\, winner of the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award\;
The Woman Who Died in Her Sleep (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 199
6)\, a finalist for both The Poet's Prize and the Lenore
Marshall Poetry Prize\; and Fire in the Conservatory (Drago
n Gate Press\, 1982).
She is also the author of literary criticis
m\, including Negative Capability: Contemporary American Poetry
(University of Michigan Press\, 2001) and The Reformation of the Subj
ect: Spenser\, Milton\, and the English Protestant Epic (Cambridge U
niversity Press\, 1995).
About her work\, the poet Rosanna Warren writes\,
"Tender and harrowing\, jagged\, severely precise and floodlit with comp
assion\, Linda Gregerson's poems break and mend poetic language as they b
reak and mend the heart."
Her awards and honors include the Levin
son Prize from Poetry magazine\, the Consuelo Ford Award from th
e Poetry Society of America\, the Isabel MacCaffrey Award from the Spense
r Society\, a Guggenheim Fellowship\, and a Pushcart Prize.
In 20
15\, Gregerson was elected a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. Sh
e teaches American poetry and Renaissance literature at the University of
Michigan\, where she also directs the MFA program in creative writing. S
he lives with her husband and two daughters in Ann Arbor\, Michigan.
UID:20160212T020000Z-82224@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150916T133145Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/82224-a-poetry-reading-by-lind
a-gregerson
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20151002T200927Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/55070_gregerson.rev.1442435675.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:82224
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/55070_gregerson.rev.1442435675.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Linda Gregerson's books of poetry include
Prodiga
l: New and Selected Poems\, 1976 to 2014 (Mariner Books\, 2015)\;
The Selvage (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 2012)\;
Magnetic North
(Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 2007)\, a finalist for the National Bo
ok Award\;
Waterborne (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 2002)\, winne
r of the Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award\;
The Woman Who Died in Her Slee
p (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt\, 1996)\, a finalist for both The Poet'
s Prize and the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize\; and
Fire in the Conser
vatory (Dragon Gate Press\, 1982).
\n
\nIn 2015\, Gregerso
n was elected a
Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. She teaches Ame
rican poetry and Renaissance literature at the University of Michigan\, w
here she also directs the MFA program in creative writing.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|open to the public|send-to-unde
rgraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160222T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160222T200000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center\, Council Chamber
GEO:45.44918;-122.670969
SUMMARY:Octavia's Brood: Science Fiction Stories from Social Justice Move
ments. Reading & presentation with Walidah Imarisha
DESCRIPTION:Join co-editor Walidah Imarisha for a reading and presentatio
n about radical science fiction and social change.Sponsored by Ethnic Stu
dies\, Office of Inclusion and Multicultural Engagement\, Gender Studies\
, English\, L&\;C Law School ACLU and L&\;C Law School National Law
yers Guild About Octavia's Brood (http://octaviasbrood.com/): Whenever
we envision a world without war\, without prisons\, without injustice\, w
e are engaging in speculative fiction. Radicals and activists devote thei
r lives to envisioning such worlds\, and then go about trying to create t
hem. What better vehicle for them to explore their work and its possibili
ties than through writing original science fiction stories? Walidah Imar
isha and adrienne maree brown brought together 20 radical writers to do j
ust that. The result is Octavia's Brood: Science Fiction Stories from Soc
ial Justice Movements\, an engaging and enlightening collection that unco
vers truths buried in the fantastic\, and injects a healthy dose of imagi
nation and innovation into our search for truth. It is the first book to
explore the connections between radical science fiction and movements for
social change\, using visionary prose to weave strands of real-life expe
rience—inequality and exploitation\, struggle and solidarity—to gener
ate innovative ways of understanding the world around us\, paint visions
of new worlds that could be\, and teach us new ways of interacting with o
ne another. This is visionary fiction to engage our imaginations and guid
e our hands in struggle. \;Walidah Imarisha (http://www.walidah.com/)
\;is a writer\, organizer\, educator and performance poet. She is on
e half of the poetic duo Good Sista/Bad Sista. She has shared the stage w
ith Angela Davis\, Cornel West\, Amiri Baraka\, Nikki Giovanni\, Kenny Mu
hammad of the Roots\, Chuck D\, Michael Franti and Spearhead\, Umar bin H
assan from The Last Poets\, Boots Riley\, Saul Williams\, Ani DiFranco\,
John Irving\, dead prez and Kochiyama. Her work has appeared in dozens of
publications\, including the hip hop anthology Total Chaos. Walidah has
facilitated poetry and journalism workshops third grade to twelfth\, in s
chools\, community centers\, youth detention facilities\, and women's pri
sons. She directed and co-produced the Katrina documentary Finding Common
Ground in New Orleans. She has taught in the Portland State University's
Black Studies Department\, Oregon State University's Women's Studies Dep
artment and Southern New Hampshire University's English Department. \
;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Join co-editor Walidah Imar
isha for a reading and presentation about radical science fiction and soc
ial change.
Sponsored by
Ethnic Studies\, Office of Inclusion and Multicultural Engagement\, Gend
er Studies\, English\, L&\;C Law School ACLU and L&\;C Law School N
ational Lawyers Guild
About Octavia's Broo
d:
Whenever we envisio
n a world without war\, without prisons\, without injustice\, we are enga
ging in speculative fiction. Radicals and activists devote their lives to
envisioning such worlds\, and then go about trying to create them. What
better vehicle for them to explore their work and its possibilities than
through writing original science fiction stories?
Walidah Imarisha and adrienne maree brown brought
together 20 radical writers to do just that. The result is Octavia's Bro
od: Science Fiction Stories from Social Justice Movements\, an engaging a
nd enlightening collection that uncovers truths buried in the fantastic\,
and injects a healthy dose of imagination and innovation into our search
for truth. It is the first book to explore the connections between radic
al science fiction and movements for social change\, using visionary pros
e to weave strands of real-life experience—inequality and exploitation\
, struggle and solidarity—to generate innovative ways of understanding
the world around us\, paint visions of new worlds that could be\, and tea
ch us new ways of interacting with one another. This is visionary fiction
to engage our imaginations and guide our hands in struggle.
&
#160\;Walidah Imarisha \;is a writer\, organizer\, educator and p
erformance poet. She is one half of the poetic duo Good Sista/Bad Sista.
She has shared the stage with Angela Davis\, Cornel West\, Amiri Baraka\,
Nikki Giovanni\, Kenny Muhammad of the Roots\, Chuck D\, Michael Franti
and Spearhead\, Umar bin Hassan from The Last Poets\, Boots Riley\, Saul
Williams\, Ani DiFranco\, John Irving\, dead prez and Kochiyama. Her work
has appeared in dozens of publications\, including the hip hop anthology
Total Chaos. Walidah has facilitated poetry and journalism workshops thi
rd grade to twelfth\, in schools\, community centers\, youth detention fa
cilities\, and women's prisons. She directed and co-produced the Katrina
documentary Finding Common Ground in New Orleans. She has taught in the P
ortland State University's Black Studies Department\, Oregon State Univer
sity's Women's Studies Department and Southern New Hampshire University's
English Department. \;
UID:20160223T030000Z-131176@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160208T133409Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/121796-octavias-brood-science-
fiction-stories-from-social
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160208T213409Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/68/width/80/height/80/cr
op/1/src_region/95,4,1329,1238/57313_ob_cvr_1.rev.1452193744.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:131176
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/68/width/80/h
eight/80/crop/1/src_region/95\,4\,1329\,1238/57313_ob_cvr_1.rev.145219374
4.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:All organizing is science fiction. \;Those wantin
g to change the world must first be able to dream of new worlds. That's w
here \;Octavia's \;Brood: Science Fiction Stories From Social Jus
tice Movements comes in. Join co-editor Walidah Imarisha for a reading an
d presentation/community conversation/discussion about radical science fi
ction and social change.
\n
Sponsored by Ethnic Studies\, Office
of Inclusion and Multicultural Engagement\, Gender Studies and English
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160224T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160224T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by David Baker
DESCRIPTION:David Baker is the author of eleven books of poems: \;Sc
avenger Loop (2015)\, \; Never-Ending Birds (2009)\,which won the The
odore Roethke Memorial Poetry Prize\, Treatise on Touch: Selected Poems (
2007\, UK)\, Midwest Eclogue (2005)\, Changeable Thunder (2001)\, The Tru
th about Small Towns (1998)\, After the Reunion (1994)\, Sweet Home\, Sat
urday Night (1991)\, Haunts (1985)\, and Laws of the Land (1981)\; Omul A
lchimic\, a selection of his poems\, was translated into Romania by C. Ta
nasescu and published by Vinea Press in Bucharest (2009). \; His five
books of prose about poetry are Show Me Your Environment: Essays on Poet
ry\, Poets\, and Poems (2014)\, Talk Poetry: Poems and Interviews with Ni
ne American Poets (2012)\, Radiant Lyre: Essays on Lyric Poetry (2007)\,
Heresy and the Ideal: Essays on Contemporary Poetry (2000) and Meter in E
nglish: A Critical Engagement (1996). \; Among his awards are fellows
hips and prizes from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation\, Nati
onal Endowment for the Arts\, Mellon Foundation\, Ohio Arts Council\, Poe
try Society of America\, Society of Midland Authors\, and the Pushcart Fo
undation. \; His poems and essays appear in such magazines as The Ame
rican Poetry Review\, The Atlantic Monthly\, The Nation\, The New Republi
c\, The New York Times\, The NewYorker\, The Paris Review\, Poetry\, Tin
House\, The Yale Review\, and many others. Baker was raised in Missouri a
nd currently resides in Granville\, Ohio\, where he serves as poetry edit
or of The Kenyon Review. \; He teaches at Denison University and in t
he MFA program for writers at Warren Wilson College. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:David Baker is the autho
r of eleven books of poems: \;Scavenger Loop (2015)\,&#
160\; Never-Ending Birds (2009)\,which won the Theodore Roethke Memo
rial Poetry Prize\, Treatise on Touch: Selected Poems (2007\, UK
)\, Midwest Eclogue (2005)\, Changeable Thunder (2001)\
, The Truth about Small Towns (1998)\, After the Reunion (1994)\, Sweet Home\, Saturday Night (1991)\, Haunts
(1985)\, and Laws of the Land (1981)\; Omul Alchimic\,
a selection of his poems\, was translated into Romania by C. Tanasescu an
d published by Vinea Press in Bucharest (2009). \; His five books of
prose about poetry are Show Me Your Environment: Essays on Poetry\, P
oets\, and Poems (2014)\, Talk Poetry: Poems and Interviews with
Nine American Poets (2012)\, Radiant Lyre: Essays on Lyric Poet
ry (2007)\, Heresy and the Ideal: Essays on Contemporary Poetry<
/em> (2000) and Meter in English: A Critical Engagement (1996).&
#160\; Among his awards are fellowships and prizes from the John Simon Gu
ggenheim Memorial Foundation\, National Endowment for the Arts\, Mellon F
oundation\, Ohio Arts Council\, Poetry Society of America\, Society of Mi
dland Authors\, and the Pushcart Foundation. \; His poems and essays
appear in such magazines as The American Poetry Review\, The Atlantic
Monthly\, The Nation\, The New Republic\, The New York Times\, The NewYo
rker\, The Paris Review\, Poetry\, Tin House\, The Yale Review\, and
many others. Baker was raised in Missouri and currently resides in Granv
ille\, Ohio\, where he serves as poetry editor of The Kenyon Review
em>. \; He teaches at Denison University and in the MFA program fo
r writers at Warren Wilson College. \;
UID:20160225T020000Z-81644@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150915T104858Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/81644-a-poetry-reading-by-davi
d-baker
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150915T174858Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/55037_dsc_0066.rev.1442339321.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:81644
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/55037_dsc_0066.rev.1442339321.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public.
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n David Baker is author of eleven books of poetr
y\, most recently Never-Ending Birds (Norton)\, which won the Th
eodore Roethke Memorial Poetry Prize in 2011\, and a forthcoming volume\,
Scavenger Loop. \; His five books of prose include Show
Me Your Environment: Essays on Poetry\, Poets\, and Poems (Michigan
\, 2014) and\, with Ann Townsend\, Radiant Lyre: Essays on Lyric Poet
ry (Graywolf\, 2007). \; Among his awards are prizes and grants
from the Guggenheim Foundation\, National Endowment for the Arts\, Poetry
Society of America\, and Society of Midland Authors. \; He holds the
Thomas B. Fordham Chair at Denison University in Granville\, Ohio\, and
is Poetry Editor of The Kenyon Review.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|open to the public|reading|send-to
-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160303T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160303T200000
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by D.A. Powell
DESCRIPTION:D. A. Powell's most recent books are Repast (2014) and Useles
s Landscape\, or A Guide for Boys (2012) which received the National Book
Critics Circle Award in poetry. His honors include the Kingsley Tufts Pr
ize in Poetry\, the Shelley Memorial Prize from the Poetry Society of Ame
rica\, and an Arts &\; Letters Award in Literature from the American A
cademy of Arts &\; Letters\, as well as fellowships from the Guggenhei
m Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. A former Briggs-Cop
eland Lecturer at Harvard\, Powell has taught at University of Iowa\, UT-
Austin\, Columbia\, Davidson and Stanford. He lives in San Francisco.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:D. A. Powell's most rece
nt books are Repast (2014) and Useless Landscape\, or A Guid
e for Boys (2012) which received the National Book Critics Circle Aw
ard in poetry. His honors include the Kingsley Tufts Prize in Poetry\, th
e Shelley Memorial Prize from the Poetry Society of America\, and an Arts
&\; Letters Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts &am
p\; Letters\, as well as fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and t
he National Endowment for the Arts. A former Briggs-Copeland Lecturer at
Harvard\, Powell has taught at University of Iowa\, UT-Austin\, Columbia\
, Davidson and Stanford. He lives in San Francisco.
UID:20160304T030000Z-81645@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150915T105917Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/81645-a-poetry-reading-by-da-p
owell
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150915T175917Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/55038_dougs_new_photo.rev.1442339924.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:81645
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/55038_dougs_new_photo.rev.1442339924.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Portrait of the Poet DA Powell\, photographed b
y Matt Valentine
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:D. A. Powell's most recent books are
Repast (2014) and Useless Landscape\, or A Guide for Boys
em> (2012) which received the National Book Critics Circle Award in poetr
y. His honors include the Kingsley Tufts Prize in Poetry\, the Shelley Me
morial Prize from the Poetry Society of America\, and an Arts &\; Lett
ers Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts &\; Letters\
, as well as fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National
Endowment for the Arts. A former Briggs-Copeland Lecturer at Harvard\, Po
well has taught at University of Iowa\, UT-Austin\, Columbia\, Davidson a
nd Stanford. He lives in San Francisco.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|open to the public|send-to-undergr
aduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160308T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160308T163000
LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 102
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:English Colloquium: Paul St. Amour\, "Surface\, Context\, and Unc
anny Historicism"
DESCRIPTION:Paul K. Saint-Amour \;is Associate Professor of English.
He works on Victorian and modernist literature\, with special interests i
n the novel\, law\, trauma\, and visual culture studies. After receiving
his BA from Yale and his PhD from Stanford\, he taught at Pomona Coll
ege for ten years before joining the Penn faculty. He has been a fellow a
t the Stanford Humanities Center\, the Center for the Humanities at Corne
ll\, and the National Humanities Center. Saint-Amour's \;The Copywrig
hts: Intellectual Property and the Literary Imagination (http://www.corne
llpress.cornell.edu/book/?GCOI=80140100639060) \;(Cornell UP\, 2003)
won the MLA Prize for a First Book. His articles have appeared in journal
s such as \;Comparative Literature Studies\, \;Critical Inquiry\,
\;Diacritics\, \;Modernism/Modernity\, \;Nineteenth-Century
Studies\, \;Novel\,Post 45 (http://post45.research.yale.edu/2011/09/2
0/counterfactual-states-of-america-on-parallel-worlds-and-longing-for-the
-law/)\, \;Public Books\, \;Theory\, Culture\, and Society\, and&
#160\;Representations\, whose special "Counterfactuals" issue he co-edite
d with Catherine Gallagher and Mark Maslan. With Robert Spoo and Joseph J
enkins he co-edited a \;special "Futures of Fair Use" issue of \;
Law and Literature. A few years ago\, Saint-Amour chaired a fact-finding
panel initiated by the International James Joyce Foundation (IJJF) to st
udy the permissions history and criteria of the Estate of James Joyce and
the general problem of scholarly fair use. The panel produced a detailed
FAQ\, \;"James Joyce: Copyright\, Fair Use\, and Permissions." (http
s://joycefoundation.osu.edu/joyce-copyright) \;Saint-Amour sits on th
e editorial board of the open-access journal \;Authorship (http://www
.authorship.ugent.be/journals/index.php?journal=authorship&\;page=inde
x). From 2012-13 he \;served \;as President of the \;Modernis
t Studies Association (http://msa.press.jhu.edu/)\, whose fair use task f
orce he co-chairs with Robert Spoo. Saint-Amour co-edits\, with Jessica
Berman\, the \;Modernist Latitudes book series at Columbia UP (http:/
/cup.columbia.edu/series/183). \;He \;edited \;the volume
0\;Modernism and Copyright (http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject
/Law/IntellectualProperty/IntellectualProperty/?view=usa&\;ci=97801997
31541) \;(2011) for \;Oxford UP's Modernist Literature and Cultur
e series and \;has just completed a book entitled \;Tense Future:
Modernism\, Total War\, Encyclopedic Form\, (Oxford UP\, 2015). \;
Participants in the colloquium are invited to read these articles prior
to the event:https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/new_literary_history/v042/42.
4.felski.html (https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/new_literary_history/v042/42
.4.felski.html)http://www.jstor.org/stable/40983827?seq=1#page_scan_tab_c
ontents (http://www.jstor.org/stable/40983827?seq=1#page_scan_tab_content
s)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Paul K. Saint-Amour
60\;is Associate Professor of English. He works on Victorian and modernis
t literature\, with special interests in the novel\, law\, trauma\, and v
isual culture studies. After receiving his BA from Yale and his PhD f
rom Stanford\, he taught at Pomona College for ten years before joining t
he Penn faculty. He has been a fellow at the Stanford Humanities Center\,
the Center for the Humanities at Cornell\, and the National Humanities C
enter. Saint-Amour's \;
The Copywrights: Intellectu
al Property and the Literary Imagination \;(Cornell UP\, 200
3) won the MLA Prize for a First Book. His articles have appeared in jour
nals such as \;
Comparative Literature Studies\, \;
Cr
itical Inquiry\, \;
Diacritics\, \;
Mode
rnism/Modernity\, \;
Nineteenth-Century Studies\, \;
Novel\,
Post 45\, \;
Public Books\, \;
Theory\, Culture\, and Society\, a
nd \;
Representations\, whose special "Counterfactuals" issue
he co-edited with Catherine Gallagher and Mark Maslan. With Robert Spoo
and Joseph Jenkins he co-edited a \;
special "Futures of Fair Use" issue
of \;Law and Literature.
A few yea
rs ago\, Saint-Amour chaired a fact-finding panel initiated by the Intern
ational James Joyce Foundation (IJJF) to study the permissions history an
d criteria of the Estate of James Joyce and the general problem of schola
rly fair use. The panel produced a detailed FAQ\, \;"James Joyce: Copyright\, Fair Use\, and
Permissions." \;Saint-Amour sits on the editorial board of the o
pen-access journal \;Author
ship. From 2012-13 he \;served \;as President of the
0\;Modernist Studies
Association\, whose fair use task force he co-chairs with Robert Spoo
.
Saint-Amour co-edits\, with Jessica Berman\, the \;Modernist Latit
udes book series at Columbia UP. \;He \;edited \;the volu
me \;Modernism and Copyright \;(2011) for \;
Oxford UP's Modernist Literature and Culture series and \;has just co
mpleted a book entitled \;Tense Future: Modernism\, Total War\, Encyclopedic Form\, (Oxford UP\, 2015).
\;
Participants in the
colloquium are invited to read these articles prior to the event:
<
a href="https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/new_literary_history/v042/42.4.fels
ki.html" target="_blank">https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/new_literary_histo
ry/v042/42.4.felski.html
http://www.jstor.or
g/stable/40983827?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
UID:20160308T233000Z-128125@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160128T101724Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/128125-english-colloquium-paul
-st-amour-surface-context
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160201T175558Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/57609_st_amour_pic.rev.1454005302.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:128125
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
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X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Paul K. Saint-Amour \;is Associa
te Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania. He works on Vi
ctorian and modernist literature\, with special interests in the novel\,
law\, trauma\, and visual culture studies. \; Saint-Amour co-edits\,
with Jessica Berman\, the \;Modernist Latitudes book series at Columbia UP.&#
160\;He \;edited \;the volume \;Modernism and Copyrig
ht \;(2011) for \;Oxford UP's Modernist Literature and C
ulture series and \;has just completed a book entitled \;Tense Future: Modernism
\, Total War\, Encyclopedic Form\, (Oxford UP\, 2015).
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|humanities|lecture|open to the public|send-to-un
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160316T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160316T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Mark Levine
DESCRIPTION:Mark Levine is the author of four books of poems: \;Debt&
#160\;(1993)\, \;Enola Gay \;(2000)\, \;The Wilds \;(2006
)\, and \;Travels of Marco\, which will be published in 2016. His poe
ms have been widely anthologized\, and have been recognized with fellowsh
ips from the National Endowment for the Arts\, the Whiting Foundation\, P
rinceton University\, and the Canada Council for the Arts. He has also pu
blished a nonfiction book\, \;F5\, and numerous articles for magazine
s including \;The New Yorker\, \;The New York Times Magazine.
0\;and \;Outside. His work has appeared in \;Best American Poetry
\, Best American Magazine Writing\, and Best American Sportswriting. He h
as taught poetry writing at University of Montana and\, since 1999\, at t
he Iowa Writers' Workshop.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Mark Levine is the author of four books of poem
s: \;Debt \;(1993)\, \;Enola Gay \;(200
0)\, \;The Wilds \;(2006)\, and \;Travels of Mar
co\, which will be published in 2016. His poems have been widely ant
hologized\, and have been recognized with fellowships from the National E
ndowment for the Arts\, the Whiting Foundation\, Princeton University\, a
nd the Canada Council for the Arts. He has also published a nonfiction bo
ok\, \;F5\, and numerous articles for magazines including
60\;The New Yorker\, \;The New York Times Magazine.
\;and \;Outside. His work has appeared in \;Bes
t American Poetry\, Best American Magazine Writing\, and Best American Sp
ortswriting. He has taught poetry writing at University of Montana a
nd\, since 1999\, at the Iowa Writers' Workshop.
UID:20160317T010000Z-82225@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150916T134311Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/82225-a-poetry-reading-by-mark
-levine
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20151123T183917Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/55071_levine.rev.1442436170.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:82225
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
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X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Mark Levine \;is the author of three books of poe
ms\, \;Debt\, \;Enola Gay\, and \;The W
ilds\, and a book of nonfiction\, \;F5. \;
\n<
br />\nA member of the Iowa Writer's Workshop faculty since 1999\, he has
also worked extensively as a journalist for magazines including \;The New York Times Magazine\, \;Outside\, and \;<
em>The New Yorker\, and he currently writes a monthly column for
Bicycling.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|open to the publi
c|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160330T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160330T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Robin Romm
DESCRIPTION:Robin Romm is the author of two books\, a chapbook\, and nume
rous articles and book reviews. Her story collection\, \;The Mother G
arden\, was a finalist for the PEN USA prize. Her memoir\, \;The Merc
y Papers\, was named a best book of the year by \;The New York Times\
, \;The San Francisco Chronicle\, and \;Entertainment Weekly.
0\; \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Robin Romm is
the author of two books\, a chapbook\, and numerous articles and book re
views. Her story collection\, \;The Mother Garden\, was a finalist fo
r the PEN USA prize. Her memoir\, \;The Mercy Papers\, was named a be
st book of the year by \;The New York Times\, \;The San Francisco
Chronicle\, and \;Entertainment Weekly. \;
\;
UID:20160331T020000Z-131177@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160208T133823Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/131177-a-fiction-reading-by-ro
bin-romm
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160208T214200Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/58444_romm.rev.1454967685.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:131177
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/58444_romm.rev.1454967685.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Robin Romm is the author of two books\, a chapbook\,
and numerous articles and book reviews. Her story collection\, \;The
Mother Garden\, was a finalist for the PEN USA prize. Her memoir\, \;
The Mercy Papers\, was named a best book of the year by \;The New Yor
k Times\, \;The San Francisco Chronicle\, and \;Entertainment Wee
kly.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|fiction|literary arts|open to the public|send-to
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160426T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160426T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Senior Student Fiction Reading
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for readings of original works of fiction by s
enior students from Don Water's Advanced Fiction Writing course. \; R
efreshments will be provided. \; We look forward to seeing you there
!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Please join us for readings of original
works of fiction by senior students from Don Water's Advanced Fiction Wr
iting course. \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forwa
rd to seeing you there!
UID:20160427T020000Z-131198@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160208T141519Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/131198-senior-student-fiction-
reading
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160208T221519Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:131198
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:
\n Please join us for readings of original works
of fiction by senior students from Don Water's Advanced Fiction Writing c
ourse. \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forward to s
eeing you there!\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|fiction|literary arts|send-to-u
ndergraduate|student event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160427T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160427T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Senior Student Poetry Reading
DESCRIPTION:Please join us as the 2014-2015 Lewis &\; Clark College Wr
iter's Series concludes with readings of original works of poetry by seni
or students from Mary Szybist's Advanced Poetry Writing course. \; Re
freshments will be provided. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Please join us as the 2014-2015 Lewis &
amp\; Clark College Writer's Series concludes with readings of original w
orks of poetry by senior students from Mary Szybist's Advanced Poetry Wri
ting course. \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forward
to seeing you there!
UID:20160428T020000Z-131199@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160208T141735Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/131199-senior-student-poetry-r
eading
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160208T221735Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:131199
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:
\n Please join us as the 2014-2015 Lewis &\; C
lark College Writer's Series concludes with readings of original works of
poetry by senior students from Mary Szybist's Advanced Poetry Writing co
urse. \; Refreshments will be provided. \; We look forward to see
ing you there!\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|open to the publi
c|reading|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160428T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160428T170000
LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:English Honors Thesis Defenses
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for honors presentations by senior English maj
ors Frances Mahoney-Mosedale and Kristen Lang. \; Frances's thesis
is entitled \; "(A Bad Accident is to Happen Quite Soon)." \; Kri
sten will present on her thesis entitled "The Entanglement of Season of M
igration to the North and Othello\, The Moor of Venice." \; Refreshme
nts will be provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Please join us for honors presentations
by senior English majors Frances Mahoney-Mosedale and Kristen Lang. 
0\;
Frances's thesis is entitled \; "(A Bad Accident is
to Happen Quite Soon)." \; Kristen will present on her thesis entitle
d "The Entanglement of Season of Migration to the North and
Othello\, The Moor of Venice." \; Refreshments will be provided.
UID:20160428T230000Z-152509@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160425T141457Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/152509-english-honors-thesis-d
efenses
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160425T211538Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/60095_slide1.rev.1461618881.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:152509
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
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X-LIVEWHALE-COST:free
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us for honors presentations by senior Eng
lish majors Frances Mahoney-Mosedale and Kristen Lang. \;
\n
\nFrances's thesis is entitled \; "(A Bad Accident is to Happen Qu
ite Soon)." \; Kristen will present on her thesis entitled "The Entan
glement of
Season of Migration to the North and
Othello\, Th
e Moor of Venice." \; Refreshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160428T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160428T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Literary Review Release Party!
DESCRIPTION:Published annually\, and run entirely by Lewis and Clark stud
ents\, The Literary Review \;provides creative writers with a hands-o
n process — in generating submissions\, in working on an editorial boar
d\, and in laying out a magazine.The Literary Review \;publishes poet
ry\, fiction\, and creative non-fiction. The next volume will be availabl
e in the spring of 2016. \; \;Appetizers and beverages will be pr
ovided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Published annually\, and run entirely b
y Lewis and Clark students\, The Literary Review \;provides
creative writers with a hands-on process — in generating submissions\,
in working on an editorial board\, and in laying out a magazine.
The Literary Review \;publishes poetry\, fiction\, and creativ
e non-fiction. The next volume will be available in the spring of 2016.&#
160\; \;
Appetizers and beverages will be provided.
UID:20160429T020000Z-131192@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160208T135007Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/131192-literary-review-release
-party
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160411T214841Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/58445_spokes.rev.1454968659.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:131192
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/58445_spokes.rev.1454968659.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:
\n The Literary Review\, Lewis &\; Clark's stu
dent-run literary magazine will be celebrating the release of this year's
edition with food and good company. \; The magazine features poetry\
, fiction\, and creative non-fiction written by students from various maj
ors. Please join us!\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|open to the publi
c|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160921T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160921T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Matthew Korfhage\, "So You Wanna Be a Journalist?"
DESCRIPTION:The world of print media is disappearing. There are less and
less ways to pay the bills by writing. Digital media is evolving as fast
as you can read this sentence. What's a soon-to-be-graduated English majo
r to do? Whether you want to set the world alight with your investigative
journalism\, or just write for a living\, Willamette Week's Matthew Korf
hage talks about his path through the contemporary media landscape.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
The world of print media is disappearin
g. There are less and less ways to pay the bills by writing. Digital medi
a is evolving as fast as you can read this sentence. What's a soon-to-be-
graduated English major to do? Whether you want to set the world alight w
ith your investigative journalism\, or just write for a living\, Will
amette Week's Matthew Korfhage talks about his path through the cont
emporary media landscape.
UID:20160922T010000Z-188884@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160906T131935Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/188884-matthew-korfhage-so-you
-wanna-be-a-journalist
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160921T224600Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/71,0,1204,1133/61904_korfhage.rev.1473193157.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:188884
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/71\,0\,1204\,1133/61904_korfhage.rev.1473193157
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X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The world of print media is disappearing. There are l
ess and less ways to pay the bills by writing. Digital media is evolving
as fast as you can read this sentence. What's a soon-to-be-graduated Engl
ish major to do? Whether you want to set the world alight with your inves
tigative journalism\, or just write for a living\,
Willamette Week's<
/em> Matthew Korfhage talks about his path through the contemporary media
landscape.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|open to the publi
c|Portland|send-to-college|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161004T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161004T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Ada Limón
DESCRIPTION:Ada Limón is the author of four books of poetry\, including&
#160\;Bright Dead Things\, which was named a finalist for the 2015 Nation
al Book Award in Poetry\, a finalist for the 2015 National Book Critics C
ircle Award\, and one of the Top Ten Poetry Books of the Year by \;Th
e New York Times. Her other books include Lucky Wreck\, This Big Fake
0\;World\, and Sharks in the Rivers. \;She serves on the faculty of Q
ueens \;University of Charlotte Low Residency M.F.A program\, and the
24Pearl Street \;online program for the Provincetown Fine Arts Work
Center. She also works as a \;freelance writer splitting her time bet
ween Lexington\, Kentucky and Sonoma\, \;California.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Ada Limón is the author of four books
of poetry\, including \;Bright Dead Things\, which was named
a finalist for the 2015 National Book Award in Poetry\, a finalist for t
he 2015 National Book Critics Circle Award\, and one of the Top Ten Poetr
y Books of the Year by \;The New York Times. Her other books
include Lucky Wreck\, This Big Fake \;World\, and
Sharks in the Rivers. \;She serves on the faculty of Queens&
#160\;University of Charlotte Low Residency M.F.A program\, and the 24Pea
rl Street \;online program for the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center
. She also works as a \;freelance writer splitting her time between L
exington\, Kentucky and Sonoma\, \;California.
UID:20161005T010000Z-187411@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160901T102346Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/187411-a-poetry-reading-by-ada
-limon
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160901T173027Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/199,0,1001,802/61643_ada-b-w-high-rez-1.rev.1472750406.jpg
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X-LIVEWHALE-ID:187411
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/199\,0\,1001\,802/61643_ada-b-w-high-rez-1.rev.
1472750406.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:(photo by Jude Domski)
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Ada Limón is the author of four books of poetry\, in
cluding \;Bright Dead Things\, which was named a finalist fo
r the 2015 National Book Award in Poetry\, a finalist for the 2015 Nation
al Book Critics Circle Award\, and one of the Top Ten Poetry Books of the
Year by \;The New York Times. Her other books include L
ucky Wreck\, This Big Fake \;World\, and Sharks in
the Rivers. \;She serves on the faculty of Queens \;Universi
ty of Charlotte Low Residency M.F.A program\, and the 24Pearl Street 
\;online program for the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center. She also wor
ks as a \;freelance writer splitting her time between Lexington\, Ken
tucky and Sonoma\, \;California.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|open to the public|reading|send-to
-college|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161102T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161102T203000
LOCATION:Albany Quadrangle\, Smith Hall
GEO:45.451415;-122.668211
SUMMARY:Johnny Stallings Presents "King Lear"
DESCRIPTION:This is an encore performance of Johnny Stallings' solo versi
on of King Lear. Stallings first performed his solo version of King Lear
in the spring of 1978\, thanks to a grant from the Metropolitan Arts Comm
ission of Portland. Since then\, he has performed in schools\, theaters\,
prisons\, and at the Cornelia Connell Theater in New York. Stallings'&#
160\; performance of King Lear is a no-frills version that will amaze and
fascinate. Without trivial things like sets\, props\, costumes\, and oth
er actors cluttering up the stage\, you'll find your brain forced to conc
entrate on nothing but the words themselves\, which–according to Johnny
–is not such a bad thing: "It's arguably the best poetry in any languag
e\," he says reverently. It takes great skill to make Shakespeare this ap
proachable\, and above all else\, his grasp of the language is impeccable
. Stallings glosses over sections of King Lear with summary asides\, and
handles the dialogue scenes by simply moving to different parts of the ro
om\, distinguishing the different characters with only the smallest varia
tions in posture and tone. The result should be clumsy and awkward\, but
the precision of his line readings\, combined with his quirky sense of hu
mor\, makes it fluid. In prior years\, this has been a standing-room-onl
y event. \; Please arrive early to get a seat. \; Refreshments t
o be provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: This is an encore performance of Johnny
Stallings' solo version of King Lear. Stallings first performed
his solo version of King Lear in the spring of 1978\, thanks to a grant
from the Metropolitan Arts Commission of Portland. Since then\, he has pe
rformed in schools\, theaters\, prisons\, and at the Cornelia Connell The
ater in New York.
Stallings' \; performance of King Lear is a
no-frills version that will amaze and fascinate. Without trivial things
like sets\, props\, costumes\, and other actors cluttering up the stage\,
you'll find your brain forced to concentrate on nothing but the words th
emselves\, which–according to Johnny–is not such a bad thing: "It's a
rguably the best poetry in any language\," he says reverently. It takes g
reat skill to make Shakespeare this approachable\, and above all else\, h
is grasp of the language is impeccable. Stallings glosses over sections o
f King Lear with summary asides\, and handles the dialogue scenes by simp
ly moving to different parts of the room\, distinguishing the different c
haracters with only the smallest variations in posture and tone. The resu
lt should be clumsy and awkward\, but the precision of his line readings\
, combined with his quirky sense of humor\, makes it fluid.
In pr
ior years\, this has been a standing-room-only event. \; Please arriv
e early to get a seat. \; Refreshments to be provided.
UID:20161103T023000Z-195492@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160927T134202Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/195492-johnny-stallings-presen
ts-king-lear
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20161012T180616Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,72,400,472/62556_king_lear.rev.1475009192.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:195492
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,72\,400\,472/62556_king_lear.rev.1475009192.
jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:This is an encore performance of Johnny Stallings' so
lo version of King Lear. Stallings first performed his solo vers
ion of King Lear in the spring of 1978\, thanks to a grant from the Metro
politan Arts Commission of Portland. Since then\, he has performed in sch
ools\, theaters\, prisons\, and at the Cornelia Connell Theater in New Yo
rk.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|open to the public|performance|per
forming arts|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161115T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161115T163000
LOCATION:Lewis &\; Clark Bookstore
GEO:45.449517;-122.671098
SUMMARY:BOOKWARMING EVENT
UID:20161115T233000Z-204262@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20161027T132125Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/204020-canceledbookwarming-event
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20161027T202717Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/254/width/80/height/80/c
rop/1/src_region/0,40,169,209/63285_dog_gone_cover.jpeg
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height/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,40\,169\,209/63285_dog_gone_cover.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:FREE
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:BOOKWARMING EVENT
\nAssociate Professor of Engli
sh Pauls Toutonghi
\n
\nNew Book:
\n
\n
\n
\n\n Dog Gone\n
A Lost Pet's Extraordinary Journey and the Family
Who Brought Him Home
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161116T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161116T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by John Beer
DESCRIPTION:John Beer is the author of \;Lucinda: A Poem (Canarium\,
2016) and \;The \;Waste \;Land \;and Other Poems(Canarium
\, 2010)\, which received the Norma Farber First Book Award from the Poet
ry Society of America. He has also edited \;Poems 1962-1997 \;by
Robert Lax (Wave\, 2013). He lives in Portland and teaches creative writi
ng at Portland State University.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: John Beer is the author of&
#160\;Lucinda: A Poem (Canarium\, 2016) and \;The \;
Waste \;Land \;and Other Poems(Canarium\, 2010)\, which rece
ived the Norma Farber First Book Award from the Poetry Society of America
. He has also edited \;Poems 1962-1997 \;by Robert Lax (
Wave\, 2013). He lives in Portland and teaches creative writing at Portla
nd State University.
UID:20161117T020000Z-187412@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160901T103007Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/187412-a-poetry-reading-by-joh
n-beer
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160901T204116Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,343,1365,1708/61644_beer_author_photo.rev.1472750862.jpg
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X-LIVEWHALE-ID:187412
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,343\,1365\,1708/61644_beer_author_photo.rev.
1472750862.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n John Beer is the author of \;<
em>Lucinda: A Poem (Canarium\, 2016) and \;The \;Waste&#
160\;Land \;and Other Poems(Canarium\, 2010)\, which received th
e Norma Farber First Book Award from the Poetry Society of America. He ha
s also edited \;Poems 1962-1997 \;by Robert Lax (Wave\,
2013). He lives in Portland and teaches creative writing at Portland Stat
e University.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|open to the public|send-to-college
|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161129T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161129T163000
LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 105
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:English Faculty Colloquium with Professor Jerry Harp
DESCRIPTION:Editing the Letters of Donald Justice This colloquium will b
e a report on the progress of Jerry Harp's work editing the letters of th
e poet Donald Justice for publication. The discussion will include some r
eflections on the purposes of editing a writer's letters\, as well as the
themes that are emerging in Justice's letters: his development as a writ
er and artist\, his search for an artistic community\, his relationship t
o his tradition and contemporaries. The presentation will also include so
me poems hitherto unpublished\, along with some discoveries concerning Ju
stice's published poems.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Editing the Letters of Donald Justic
e
This colloquium will be a report on the progre
ss of Jerry Harp's work editing the letters of the poet Donald Justice fo
r publication. The discussion will include some reflections on the purpos
es of editing a writer's letters\, as well as the themes that are emergin
g in Justice's letters: his development as a writer and artist\, his sear
ch for an artistic community\, his relationship to his tradition and cont
emporaries. The presentation will also include some poems hitherto unpubl
ished\, along with some discoveries concerning Justice's published poems.
UID:20161129T233000Z-211278@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20161121T134353Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/211278-english-faculty-colloqu
ium-with-professor-jerry
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20161121T214553Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,26,1600,1626/6593_JerryHarp08.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
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32.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Editing the Letters of Donald Justice
\n
\nThis colloquium will be a report on the progres
s of Jerry Harp's work editing the letters of the poet Donald Justice for
publication. The discussion will include some reflections on the purpose
s of editing a writer's letters\, as well as the themes that are emerging
in Justice's letters: his development as a writer and artist\, his searc
h for an artistic community\, his relationship to his tradition and conte
mporaries. The presentation will also include some poems hitherto unpubli
shed\, along with some discoveries concerning Justice's published poems.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|lecture|open to the public|presentation|send-to-
undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161201T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161201T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Arthur Bradford
DESCRIPTION:Arthur Bradford is an O Henry Award winning writer and Emmy-n
ominated filmmaker. His writing has appeared in Esquire\, McSweeney's\, V
ice\, Men's Journal\, and many other publications. His first book\, Dogwa
lker\, was published by Knopf and Vintage paperback in 2002\, and has bee
n translated into ten languages. \;In 2012 McSweeney's published
0\;Benny's Brigade\, a children's book. \;Bradford's newest book\, "
Turtleface"\, was published by Farrar\, Strauss\, and Giroux in February
2015. Bradford is also the creator and director of the acclaimed "How's
Your News?" documentary series\, versions of which have been broadcast on
HBO/Cinemax\, PBS\, and Channel Four England. He developed the concept i
nto a series for MTV which ran throughout 2009. \;A new film in the
series\, "Election 2012" was released Oct. 2012 and can be seen in full a
t howsyournews.com (http://www.howsyournews.com/). \;In 2011 Bradfor
d directed the Emmy-nominated documentary\, "Six Days to Air"\, about the
making of South Park\, for Comedy Central. \;He is currently shooti
ng a feature documentary about Trey Parker and Matt Stone. \; Bradfo
rd lives in Portland\, Oregon and works at a juvenile detention center.&#
160\;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Arthur Bradford is an O Henry Award win
ning writer and Emmy-nominated filmmaker. His writing has appeared in Esquire\, McSweeney's\, Vice\, Men's Journal<
/em>\, and many other publications. His first book\, Dogwalker\,
was published by Knopf and Vintage paperback in 2002\, and has been tran
slated into ten languages. \;In 2012 McSweeney's published \;Benny's Brigade\, a children's book. \;Bradford's newest book\
, "Turtleface"\, was published by Farrar\, Strauss\, and Giroux in Februa
ry 2015.
Bradford is also the creator and director of the acclaim
ed "How's Your News?" documentary series\, versions of which have been br
oadcast on HBO/Cinemax\, PBS\, and Channel Four England. He developed the
concept into a series for MTV which ran throughout 2009. \;A new fi
lm in the series\, "Election 2012" was released Oct. 2012 and can be seen
in full at howsyournews.com.
\;In 2011 Bradford directed the Emmy-nominated documentary\, "Six Da
ys to Air"\, about the making of South Park\, for Comedy Central. \;
He is currently shooting a feature documentary about Trey Parker and Matt
Stone. \;
Bradford lives in Portland\, Oregon and works at a
juvenile detention center. \;
UID:20161202T020000Z-187414@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160901T105101Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/187414-a-fiction-reading-by-ar
thur-bradford
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20161128T221115Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/61647_bradford_arthur_color_c_sarah_law.rev.1472752238.jpg
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ight/80/crop/1/61647_bradford_arthur_color_c_sarah_law.rev.1472752238.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Arthur Bradford is an O Henry Award winning writer an
d Emmy-nominated filmmaker. His writing has appeared in Esquire\
, McSweeney's\, Vice\, Men's Journal\, and man
y other publications. His first book\, Dogwalker\, was published
by Knopf and Vintage paperback in 2002\, and has been translated into te
n languages. \;In 2012 McSweeney's published \;Benny's Briga
de\, a children's book. \;Bradford's newest book\, "Turtleface"
\, was published by Farrar\, Strauss\, and Giroux in February 2015.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|fiction|literary arts|open to the public|reading
|send-to-college|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170125T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170125T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by James Galvin
DESCRIPTION:James Galvin was raised in northern Colorado. He has publishe
d eight collections of poetry\, most recently EVERYTHING WE ALWAYS KNEW W
AS TRUE (Copper Canyon\, 2016). He is also the author of the critically a
cclaimed prose book THE MEADOW\, and the novel FENCING THE SKY. His honor
s include a Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Award\, a Lannan Literary Award\
, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation\, the Ingram Merrill Fou
ndation\, and the National Endowment for the Arts. He has a home and some
horses outside of Tie Siding\, Wyoming\, and is a member of the permanen
t faculty of the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: James Galvin was raised in northern Col
orado. He has published eight collections of poetry\, most recently EVERY
THING WE ALWAYS KNEW WAS TRUE (Copper Canyon\, 2016). He is also the auth
or of the critically acclaimed prose book THE MEADOW\, and the novel FENC
ING THE SKY. His honors include a Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Award\, a
Lannan Literary Award\, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation\,
the Ingram Merrill Foundation\, and the National Endowment for the Arts.
He has a home and some horses outside of Tie Siding\, Wyoming\, and is a
member of the permanent faculty of the University of Iowa Writers' Worksh
op.
UID:20170126T020000Z-187413@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20160901T103512Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/187413-a-poetry-reading-by-jam
es-galvin
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20160901T173512Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/345,0,1708,1364/61645_galvinphotokirksmurray.rev.147275123
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X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/345\,0\,1708\,1364/61645_galvinphotokirksmurray
.rev.1472751237.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:James Galvin was raised in northern Colorado. He has
published eight collections of poetry\, most recently EVERYTHING WE ALWAY
S KNEW WAS TRUE (Copper Canyon\, 2016). He is also the author of the crit
ically acclaimed prose book THE MEADOW\, and the novel FENCING THE SKY. H
is honors include a Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Award\, a Lannan Literar
y Award\, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation\, the Ingram Mer
rill Foundation\, and the National Endowment for the Arts. He has a home
and some horses outside of Tie Siding\, Wyoming\, and is a member of the
permanent faculty of the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|literary arts|open to the publi
c|send-to-college|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR